Shake-up,
sit-in at Soka U.
A dean loses
his post, and a popular teacher won't be back
The Orange
County Register/February 8, 2003
By Marla Jo
Fisher and Lois Evezich
Aliso Viejo
-- Soka University's dean of faculty was removed, its best-known
faculty member leveled charges of religious bias and students
staged a sit-in Friday in the most turbulent day in the school's
short history.
At the center
of the controversy: Soka's decision not to renew the contract
of popular teacher and best-selling author Joe McGinniss.
McGinniss,
author of "Fatal Vision" and "Blind Faith,"
said he initially had been led to believe his one-year contract
to teach writing and journalism would be renewed for a second
year, but he was told 10 days ago he should leave by April.
About 20 protesting
students who spread blankets and camped on a lawn also said university
officials are violating their promises of academic freedom by
giving hiring preference to members of the Soka Gakkai Buddhist
sect. The students also complain the school has been hiring part-time
faculty instead of full-time professors.
"I was
led to believe this was a nonsectarian university," said
sophomore Murphy McMahon, who was among those who camped out in
front of the cafeteria. "But it's not. It's (Soka Gakkai
International.)"
On Friday,
university officials vehemently denied the allegations of religious
preferences and said most of the faculty and staff do not belong
to the Buddhist sect. Soka Gakkai International is an affiliate
of the largest Buddhist denomination in Japan, which also has
a large U.S. following.
Its members
raised nearly half a billion dollars to build the 103-acre campus
in Aliso Viejo and provide an endowment, according to published
reports.
Earlier attempts
to found an American branch of the Japanese university attracted
controversy a decade ago when officials sought to expand a small
graduate school on a hilltop in Calabasas, triggering lawsuits
from neighbors.
Instead, the
liberal arts university was built in Aliso Viejo. The campus,
designed after a Tuscan village, opened with 100 students in 2001
amid promises of a student-centered institution with a low teacher-student
ratio, a dedication to world peace and low-key recognition of
its Buddhist founding. The school has about 200 undergraduates,
officials said.
University
President Daniel Habuki said Friday that he asked for the resignation
of Dean Alfred Balitzer.
Balitzer,
who could not be reached for comment, was fired because of some
"inappropriate correspondence relating to this incident,"
campus Vice President Arch Asawa said. He declined to comment
further, except to say that Balitzer will be asked to stay on
to teach political science.
McGinniss,
60, said Balitzer, who also is on the faculty of Claremont McKenna
College, had led him to believe that his contract would be renewed.
The author said he was paid $77,500 and offered a campus-owned
house to live in for his teaching duties this year.
"To be
honest, if I were a member of Soka Gakkai, there would be no question
of my (not) returning next year," McGinniss said.
Asawa said
McGinniss' allegations are "absolutely false," and the
university was pleased with his performance and his popularity
with students.
"This
is strictly a budgetary issue," Asawa said.
Despite the
controversy, McGinniss said he would like to stay next year if
invited because of the superb caliber of the students he is teaching
creative writing and journalism.
"One
year is not enough when you are working with writing students,"
McGinniss said.
Read
more about Soka