Printed from America's Survival, Inc. - http://www.usasurival.org/

How Did Communist Terrorist Bill Ayers Get His Teaching Job at the University of Illinois?

America’s Survival, Inc. (ASI), a public policy group run by veteran journalist Cliff Kincaid, has announced the holding of an August 20 Washington, D.C. conference, “Communism in the Classroom,” featuring presentations by leading professors concerned about the treatment of communism in America’s colleges and universities.

Questions to be addressed, in the wake of the University of Illinois admissions scandal, include how Ayers got his job as a “Distinguished Professor” at the University, and how he managed to obtain tenure? 

The University of Illinois at Chicago has been embroiled in an admissions scandal, uncovered by the Chicago Tribune, involving charges that hundreds of students got into the university because of political and financial connections. A Tribune investigation found that “more than 800 undergraduate applicants received special consideration from 2005 to 2009 because they had powerful patrons, including elected officials, trustees and donors.”

“We know that Ayers’ father, Thomas Ayers, had enormous clout in Chicago,” declared ASI President Cliff Kincaid. “He was CEO of Commonwealth Edison as well as a trustee of the Tribune Co. and chairman of the board of Northwestern University, where Ayers’ wife Bernardine Dohrn got a teaching job. What role did he play in getting his communist son a job at the University of Illinois?”

As America’s students are getting set to return to school in the fall, the ASI conference will provide the first opportunity for members of the public and the press to understand how Barack Obama associate and communist Bill Ayers got a teaching position at the University of Illinois and what he is inflicting in the name of “education” on students in the classroom.

Professor Mary Grabar will discuss her report, “The Extreme Make-Over of William Ayers: How a Communist Terrorist Became a ‘Distinguished’ Professor of Education,” and Professor Paul Kengor will present, “Anti-Anti-Communism and the Academy.”

Kincaid, who serves as President of ASI and editor of the Accuracy in Media (AIM) Report, will discuss his report, “Saving the World For Socialism,” based on the incriminating information in the FBI file of journalism educator and Professor Curtis MacDougall, who was a Professor at Northwestern and whose Interpretative Reporting textbook was the standard in journalism schools and classrooms for decades.

In connection with Ayers, a target of ASI in connection with the unsolved bombing murder of a San Francisco policeman, Kincaid will discuss how his organization was forced to file state Freedom of Information Act requests to get basic information about what Ayers is teaching students at the University of Illinois. Grabar is currently preparing an updated report for ASI on what this limited release of information shows about how Ayers was hired, how he was granted tenure, and what teaching materials he is currently using in the classroom.

The conference will be held at the National Press Club in the First Amendment Lounge, beginning at 12:30 p.m. Admission is free of charge but reservations are requested by calling 443-964-8208 or emailing Kincaid@comcast.net and leaving your name, affiliation, and telephone number. The National Press Club is located at 529 14th St. NW, 13th Floor, Washington, DC 20045.

More information can be found at www.usasurvival.org

Bios of Speakers:


Cliff Kincaid is an investigative journalist who specializes in analyzing the effects of communist and terrorist influence on the U.S. media. Cliff concentrated in journalism and communications at the University of Toledo, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree, and came to Washington through a national journalism program headed by conservative author and journalist M. Stanton Evans. Cliff served on the staff of Human Events newspaper for several years and was an editorial writer and newsletter editor for former National Security Council staffer Oliver North at his Freedom Alliance educational foundation. He has written or co-authored nine books on media and cultural affairs and foreign policy issues.

Mary Grabar was born in Slovenia and escaped communist Yugoslavia as a two year-
old with her parents. She grew up in Rochester, New York, and moved to Atlanta in
the 1980s. She earned her Ph.D. in English from the University of Georgia in 2002, and
now teaches part-time on two campuses in and near Atlanta. She writes for such publications as The Weekly Standard, Pajamas Media, CNS News, The American Spectator, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and Townhall. Her poetry and fiction have been published in Saint Ann’s Review, The Pedestal, Ballyhoo Stories, and other journals. She is a contributing editor to the Chattahoochee Review and has completed two novel manuscripts, one a satire about the sexual
revolution and higher education, and another, a semiautobiographical literary mystery
involving immigrants from communist countries.

Paul Kengor is the executive director of the Center for Vision & Values and professor of political science at Grove City College. Known for his best-selling books, God and Ronald Reagan, God and George W. Bush, and The Crusader: Ronald Reagan and the Fall of Communism, Kengor frequently appears as a political commentator on national radio and television. His most recent books are The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan's Top Hand, and God and Hillary Clinton. He received his master's degree from American University and his doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh.

 



 

           Printer-friendly version

Click here to be added to our mailing list.