Lois B. DeFleur: Difference between revisions
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* Her successful effort to increase the size of the college from 5,000 to nearly 11,000 undergraduates moved it from the ranks of an elite college to that of a large generic state university with average students <ref>http://www.bingwiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=Binghamton_University/ref> |
* Her successful effort to increase the size of the college from 5,000 to nearly 11,000 undergraduates moved it from the ranks of an elite college to that of a large generic state university with average students <ref>http://www.bingwiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=Binghamton_University/ref> |
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* Instances of fraternity and sorority hazing kept from the public during the DeFleur years were finally made public by the next administration <ref>http://wnbf.com/binghamton-university-president-hazing-must-stop//ref> |
* Instances of fraternity and sorority hazing kept from the public during the DeFleur years were finally made public by the next administration <ref>http://wnbf.com/binghamton-university-president-hazing-must-stop//ref> |
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== Retirement == |
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{{Out of date|date=March 2012}} |
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* Implicated in inpropriaties that had been hinted at throughout her tenure but which were clearly described in the Kaye Report <ref>http://www.suny.edu/Files/sunynewsFiles/Pdf/KayeReport.PDF/ref> |
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* Her successful effort to increase the size of the college from 5,000 to nearly 11,000 undergraduates moved it from the ranks of an elite college to that of a large generic state university with average students <ref>http://www.bingwiki.org/wiki/index.php?title=Binghamton_University/ref> |
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* Instances of fraternity and sorority hazing kept from the public during the DeFleur years were finally made public by the next administration <ref>http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/22/opinion/field-reports-the-hazing-at-binghamton-u.html?_r=0, http://www.pressconnects.com/article/20120922/NEWS01/309220030/E-mails-show-Binghamton-U-city-police-struggled-stop-hazing, http://wnbf.com/binghamton-university-president-hazing-must-stop/>/ref> |
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== Retirement == |
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{{Out of date|date=March 2012}} |
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Citing her upcoming marriage and the fragile health of her mother, DeFleur announced on January 13, 2010 that she will retire from her position as president of Binghamton University at the end of the Spring 2010 semester. A successor is to be appointed by the Binghamton University Council. [http://www.binghamton.edu/calendar/b-line/news.cgi?id=257] |
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== Criticisms == |
== Criticisms == |
Revision as of 18:53, 8 December 2012
Lois B. DeFleur, Ph.D. | |
---|---|
President, Binghamton University | |
In office 1990–2010 | |
Preceded by | Clifford D. Clark |
Succeeded by | C. Peter Magrath |
Personal details | |
Born | Illinois | June 25, 1936
Residence | Vestal, NY |
Alma mater | University of Illinois Indiana University Blackburn College |
Profession | Sociology |
Website | [1] |
Lois B. DeFleur (born June 25, 1936) was president of Binghamton University from 1990 to 2010. She came to the university after being provost at the University of Missouri. Before that she had served as a sociology professor at Missouri State University and Washington State University. She has a doctorate in sociology from the University of Illinois. She studied juvenile delinquency in Latin America and has done extensive work in the fields of deviant behavior and occupational socialization.
DeFleur became the president at Binghamton University in 1990, making her the longest serving president of the university to date. She retired at the end of July 2010 [2].
DeFleur at Binghamton
A few of the events occurring under her administration:
- Began an aggressive fundraising campaign, more than doubling giving for multiple consecutive years.
- Moved athletics to Division I from Division III, changing the school's mascot from the Colonial to the Bearcat.
- Binghamton's publications rankings increased (although some have declined drastically in recent years, such as overall ranking in the Princeton Review).
- Reorganized schools at Binghamton: the College of Community and Public Affairs and the School of Education were created July 1, 2006, from the former School of Education and Human Development.
- Funded construction of over more than a dozen new buildings, including a new residence community, university union addition, events center, academic complex and the new Downtown University Center.
- The University’s endowment has risen from approximately $8 million to $64.5 million.
- Faculty research awards have increased 60 percent.
- Binghamton completed its first-ever comprehensive gifts campaign more than a year early, and at 121 percent of its goal.
- Binghamton was designated a New York State Center of Excellence in 2006.
- Announced retirement weeks before major scandal involving the basketball team was revealed to the public. [1]
- Implicated for inproprieties that had been hinted at throughout her tenure as university president but which were clearly described in the Kaye Report. Cite error: A
<ref>
tag is missing the closing</ref>
(see the help page). - Instances of fraternity and sorority hazing kept from the public during the DeFleur years were finally made public by the next administration == Retirement ==
This article needs to be updated.(March 2012) |
Ci/ref>
- Implicated in inpropriaties that had been hinted at throughout her tenure but which were clearly described in the Kaye Report Cite error: A
<ref>
tag is missing the closing</ref>
(see the help page).
- While DeFleur was holding the Energy East stock (worth more than $500,000 when she sold it in 2007), the campus purchased Energy East's office building for $6.1 million across from the campus—a transaction dismissed as a sweetheart deal by local real estate experts and state officials. This deal—DeFleur says she recused herself, but her aides kept her informed on the no-bid deal—was at first rejected by the Public Service Commission, the state comptroller's office and the state attorney general. Although it was eventually approved, an assistant attorney general, Henry DeCotis, still objected to the entire transaction, arguing the school will have paid more than $140,000 too much. In addition, he said, the deal allowed Energy East to keep office and parking spaces.[2]
References
- ^ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binghamton_University_basketball_scandal
- ^ Thamel, Pete (February 28, 2010). "At Binghamton, Concern That Sports Still a Focus". The New York Times.
External links