Friday, February 24, 2023

Dennis Anderson was born Feb. 24, 1937, in San Francisco. This ran in the Jan. 15, 2023, Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

Dennis C. Anderson was born Feb. 24, 1937, in San Francisco. He died Jan. 12, 2022, in Salem, Oregon, at age 84. This ran in the Jan. 15, 2023, Honolulu Star-Advertiser.



Sunday, February 12, 2023

Johnny Bill ‘Moon’ Self came to Linfield College from Napa, Calif.

 


Johnny Bill ‘Moon’ Self came to Linfield College from Napa, Calif.

Johnny Bill ‘Moon’ Self graduated from Napa High school where he was student body president, played football and was on the swimming team.

After high school, he attended Napa Junior College (now Napa Valley College). A 6-foot-1, 190-pound center, he played football for the college’s 1964 team coached by Dick Vermeil, who went on to head coaching fame in college (his UCLA team beat favored Ohio State in a Rose Bowl) and the NFL: St. Louis Rams (won a Super Bowl), Philadelphia (lost a Super Bowl), and Kansas City. He’s in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. 

After attending Napa JC, he transferred to Linfield, where his sister, Nancy, was a student.

More info about John below. Also see stories linked below:

 

(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, Jan. 25, 1962)

Redwood Junior High School in Napa “conducted its student body election last week with Johnny Self chosen as president of the ASB." He will be installed during special ceremonies on Feb. 19.


(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, 1962-1964)

Stories about Napa High School swimming include mention of swimmer John Self. There’s also a team photo which includes John.


John Self

New Student

President

(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, May 27, 1963)

John Self, 16-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Aucie Self of 3527 Idlewild Ave. has been elected president of the Napa Senior High School student body for the fall semester. He will be entering his senior year when he takes office. His father is a teacher at Redwood Junior High School and his mother is active in Parent-Teacher Association and activities and other civic affairs.


Vermiel Debuts As

Napa JC Coach In

Hollister Opener

(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, Sept. 18, 1964)

Story about Dick Vermeil’s first game as head football coach of Napa Junior College list players on his team including 6-foot-1 190-pound center John Self of Napa

(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, March 14, 1967)

Nancy and John Self are among Linfield College students in McMinnville Ore., who participated in the school’s 37th annual speech tournament. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Self, Nancy is a senior majoring in speech education and John is a junior.

205 Junior College Students Receive Degrees Tonight

(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, June 9, 1966

Johnny Bill Self was among 230 students listed as graduating from Napa Junior College.

The Napa High School class of 1966, the largest in the history of the school, will receive diplomas tomorrow night at commencement exercises in Memorial Stadium at 7 p.m.

The newly landscaped quad in the center of the Napa Junior College student complex will be the setting tonight in which 205 young men and women are scheduled to receive associate of arts degrees.

The diplomas will be handed to them by Hubert Fruehauf, president of the board of trustees, after the class is president by Dr. James Diemer, president superintendent.

The processional will start at 7:30 after a half hour concert by the Napa Concert Band under the direction of Bertil van Boer.

The class speaker will be Joy Word. "The Community College” will be her topic. James Blue, spring president of the sophomore class will present the class gift.


(Napa Valley, Calif., Register, June 3, 1969)

JOHNNY SELF, son of the A. W. Selfs of Napa, was among 194 Linfield College students in McMinnville, Ore., to receive degrees during spring commencement. The youth earned a BA degree is in speech and English.

 

Read more about Johnny Bill ‘Moon’ Self:

 

Linfielder Johnny Bill 'Moon' Self was in filmed in Oregon 1969 movie 'Paint Your Wagon'

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2016/11/linfielder-johnny-bill-moon-self-was-in.html

 

There’s even more to the story about 1967 Linfield football game

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2011/10/theres-even-more-to-story-about-1967.html

 

Few remember, but Bill Carter will never forget the kick he made for 1967 Linfield football team

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2011/10/few-remember-but-bill-carter-will-never.html

 

Remembering 'The Waldorf'

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2019/01/remembering-waldorf-of-linfield-college.html

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Tuesday, February 07, 2023

Former Prof. Daniel Pollack-Pelzner settles with Linfield for $1 million


Former Prof. Daniel Pollack-Pelzner settles with Linfield for $1 million

He sued Linfield in 2021 for wrongful termination

By Kirby Neumann-Rea, McMinnville N-R/News-Register Feb. 6, 2023

Nearly two years after his firing, professor Daniel Pollack-Pelzner has settled out of court with Linfield University over his wrongful termination lawsuit.

The university has agreed to pay $1,000,030 to the former Linfield English professor.

“I feel relieved to be done with litigation, as that was not a path I would have chosen if not for the violation of my academic rights and freedom,” said Pollack-Pelzner, who filed a lawsuit against Linfield in July 2021 for unlawful whistleblower retaliation. Linfield had abruptly terminated Pollack-Pelzer’s employment in April of that year, after he repeatedly called upon university leadership to address reports by students and faculty of sexual harassment by university trustees and the president.

“I am grateful to the many students, alumni and colleagues at Linfield and around the world who spoke up in defense of the right to speak up and to report safety concerns without fear of retaliation,” said Pollack-Pelzner said. “I hope it communicates clearly that if we don’t uphold these principles there will be a real cost.”

Pollack-Pelzner said the university has 30 days to pay the first half of the settlement and, once that is received, he and his attorneys will formally withdraw the complaint.

Pollack-Pelzner said the agreement “met my criteria of seven figures and non-confidential, so I could talk about it.” He is now visiting scholar at Portland State University, teaching English and theater.

Linfield issued the following email statement on Monday:

“Linfield has agreed to resolve all legal claims with former faculty member Daniel Pollack-Pelzner. The university has made its position clear on the merits of the litigation, through filings and submissions to the court,” said Scott Nelson, associate vice president for strategic communications. “However, defending against litigation, even when confident in the legal outcome, diverts time and energy from the mission of the institution. We felt it preferable to resolve this situation and move on.

“The university’s insurers recommended the agreement, and the decision is unlikely to have an impact on Linfield’s budget or finances moving forward. Most importantly, this agreement allows Linfield to focus on building and expanding upon its rich educational heritage and creating a welcoming community for all,” Nelson said.

Nelson did not respond when asked to elaborate on how the settlement might affect university policy and procedures.

“We are so proud of Dr. Pollack-Pelzner’s unwavering courage to speak truth to power and to advocate for meaningful change on behalf of his students and fellow professors at Linfield,” said Pollack-Pelzner’s attorney, Dana Sullivan, “Ultimately, we hope his case sends a clear message that sexual harassment must not be tolerated on any campus and that institutions that seek to silence whistleblowers will be held to account.”

The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) undertook its own investigation into Pollack-Pelzner’s firing, citing issues of “academic freedom and due process” as serious concerns meriting closer examination. The university repeatedly said it did not recognize the AAUP’s standing regarding matters at Linfield, calling its findings misleading and inaccurate. Nelson also declined this week to comment on the AAUP report, which admonished Linfield for its retaliatory termination of Pollack-Pelzner. Shortly after, the AAUP added Linfield to its list of officially censured administrations — the AAUP’s first censure of any university from Oregon.

https://newsregister.com/article?articleTitle=pollack-pelzner-settles-suit-against-linfield--1675733311--45307--1home-news

 

Monday, February 06, 2023

Fired Linfield University professor wins more than $1 million in whistleblower suit against college



 

Fired Linfield University professor wins more than $1 million in whistleblower suit against college

By Maxine Bernstein, Oregonian

Updated: Feb. 06, 2023, 8:34 a.m. Published: Feb. 06, 2023, 8:32 a.m.

 

Linfield University has agreed to pay just over $1 million to settle a whistleblower suit filed by tenured English professor Daniel Pollack-Pelzner, who accused the university of firing him for speaking out against alleged sexual harassment and discrimination by university board trustees and the president.

The university will pay Pollack-Pelzner a total of $1,037,500 to cover his lost wages, emotional distress and attorney fees.

The university disputed Pollack-Pelzner’s claims but agreed to the settlement, according to records obtained by The Oregonian/OregonLive.

Pollack-Pelzner, who began teaching at Linfield in 2010, had held an endowed chair in Shakespeare studies until he was abruptly fired in late April 2021.

“Ultimately, we hope his case sends a clear message that sexual harassment must not be tolerated on any campus and that institutions that seek to silence whistleblowers will be held to account,” said attorney Dana L. Sullivan, who represented Pollack-Pelzner.

Pollack-Pelzner, now a visiting scholar at Portland State University, said he’s pleased with the outcome and hopes it shows Linfield University and other universities that there’s “real consequences” for firing a tenured faculty member without due process.

“Everyone should be able to work and study without fear of discrimination or harassment, and everyone should be able to report their safety concerns without fear of retaliation,” Pollack-Pelzner said. “I’m grateful for the many students, alumni, and colleagues who joined me in demanding change and refused to be silenced when Linfield failed to uphold these essential principles.”

The university agreed to pay Pollack-Pelzner $517,393.76 for non-economic damages, $85,000 for lost wages and $435,106.24 for attorney fees.

Scott Nelson, Linfield University’s associate vice president for strategic communications, said the university “felt it preferable to resolve this situation and move on,” at the recommendation of the university’s insurers.

Though the university does not admit to any wrongdoing, “defending against litigation, even when confident in the legal outcome, diverts time and energy from the mission of the institution,” Nelson said, in an email.

“Most importantly, this agreement allows Linfield University to focus on building and expanding upon its rich educational heritage and creating a welcoming community for all.”

Pollack-Pelzner learned of his firing on April 27, 2021, when his school-issued laptop suddenly froze during a video conference and his university email account sent out a return message that he was no longer employed at the school.

His suit alleged the school attempted to “silence” him and fired him because he disclosed and discussed allegations from students and faculty of sexual harassment, sexual assault and religious discrimination. His termination touched off a national and international outcry from educational organizations, as well as Linfield students, alumni and faculty.

Longtime Linfield trustee and university donor Ronni Lacroute, who had endowed Pollack-Pelzner’s chair to keep him at the private college in McMinnville, resigned in protest from the board, saying she was appalled and could no longer serve in “good conscience.”

As part of the settlement, Pollack-Pelzner agreed to dismiss his lawsuit and any other complaints or administrative actions challenging his termination or arising out of his past relationship with the Linfield University’s board of trustees.

He also agreed not to file any future claim against Linfield University, yet the settlement doesn’t prohibit Pollack-Pelzner from pursuing or participating in an investigation done by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission or any similar state or federal agency.

Linfield University also agreed to dismiss counterclaims and not pursue any future legal claims against Pollack-Pelzner.

Pollack-Pelzner became a Linfield faculty trustee in 2019 and repeatedly raised concerns about student and faculty allegations of sexual harassment and inappropriate contact by board trustees. He pressed university President Miles K. Davis and then-board chair David Baca to institute sexual harassment training for all trustees and adopt restrictions on use of alcohol during trustee events with students and faculty.

Longtime Linfield trustee and university donor Ronni Lacroute, who had endowed Prof. Daniel Pollack-Pelzner’s chair to keep him at the private college in McMinnville, resigned in protest from the Linfield University board after Pollack-Pelzner's firing, saying she was appalled and could no longer serve in “good conscience.”

David Jubb, a longtime member of the university’s board, resigned as a board trustee in June 2019 after AnnaMarie Motis, an undergraduate student trustee, said Jubb groped her in February of that year.

Motis said Jubb grabbed her and pulled her body to his as they waited in the lobby of the Michelbook Country Club after a faculty-trustee dinner and then continued to touch her inappropriately at a McMinnville bar afterward. Motis reported Jubb’s behavior to Baca and to the college within a week and made a police report in March 2019, her lawyers said.

At the time of Jubb’s resignation, Baca said it was “due to health concerns.” Yet months later, in December 2019, Motis filed a civil suit against the university and publicly came forward, accusing Jubb of groping her and urging a judge to order Linfield to take steps to prevent and investigate sexual harassment. Motis reached a settlement of her suit against the university for $500,000.

Jubb, Motis learned, had been accused in 2018 by a graduate of sexually abusing her and two of her friends after drinking too much at a bar following a senior achievement dinner on campus in 2017. The Linfield graduate, who agreed to be identified by her initials A.K., singled out Baca for criticism, saying the school’s general counsel told her that Baca “gave his word that David Jubb would never have contact with students again or be allowed at events that served alcohol.”

Jubb subsequently was charged in an eight-count indictment that accused him of sexually abusing the four different students in 2017 and 2019. He faced one felony count of first degree-sexual abuse and seven misdemeanor counts of third-degree sexual abuse. He pleaded no contest to two counts of harassment for groping two of the students. Jubb was sentenced in October 2021 to 18 months of probation, ordered to undergo an alcohol abuse assessment and complete 40 hours of community service.

The month before Jubb’s sentencing, Baca stepped down as board chair after facing campus criticism for his handling of sexual abuse allegations involving Jubb.

Another Linfield professor filed complaints, alleging that Davis, the Linfield president, and another trustee, Norm Nixon, had touched her inappropriately at school events. An outside investigator found the professor’s allegations were “substantiated by a preponderance of the evidence” but that the behavior didn’t violate university policy. The university never investigated another student’s allegation of inappropriate touching in May 2019 by another sitting trustee, David Haugeberg. Nelson in May 2021 said the university had received a written statement “that purported to be from an unnamed student” involving Haugeberg and that the university’s Title IX coordinator read the letter, consulted with the general counsel and “determined the statements would not have amounted to a violation of university policies.”

Pollack-Pelzner, who urged the university’s board and board chair to address the complaints, was later restricted from attending the board’s executive sessions. The university claimed he had breached the sessions’ confidentiality provisions.

Pollack-Pelzner said Davis asked him to withdraw a report to faculty in February 2020 expressing concern about Linfield leadership’s handling of sexual misconduct allegations against trustees, including Jubb. Davis, according to the suit, said Pollack-Pelzner’s report “would destroy Linfield.”

Pollack-Pelzner said any information he shared on alleged sexual misconduct by trustees came from material that faculty, students or alumni shared with him, not from the board’s executive sessions.

Pollack-Pelzner also had alleged that Davis made an antisemitic remark about the “length of Jewish noses” in a 2018 meeting. The two had been discussing Shakespeare’s “The Merchant of Venice” and its themes of prejudice and intolerance.

Davis acknowledged in an interview with The Oregonian/OregonLive that he had made a reference about Jewish noses in the meeting, saying, “I might have well said that from a physical characteristic perspective, you’d be hard-pressed to tell the difference amongst Semitic people.”

He had denied making the comment when questioned by an independent investigator hired by the university, according to school records.

Davis and the school had defended Pollack-Pelzner’s firing. In an interview, Davis said it wasn’t Pollack-Pelzner’s role “to be the crusader,” that there were “appropriate channels to go through.”

The afternoon that Pollack-Pelzner was fired, then-Linfield Provost Susan Agre-Kippenhan sent a message to the university community saying Linfield “took the extraordinary step of terminating the employment of a member of our faculty for serious breaches of the individual’s duty to the institution.” She wrote that the “goal of a safe, welcoming and inclusive environment for all … cannot be achieved if individuals abuse their positions of trust and take deliberate actions that harm the university.”

The university also released a statement saying Pollack-Pelzner “deliberately circulated false statements about the university, its employees and its board,” was insubordinate and “interfered with the university’s administration of its responsibilities.”

Pollack-Pelzner’s firing prompted the American Association of University Professors, a nonprofit group of faculty and other academic professionals based in Washington, D.C., to censure the university after finding Linfield fired Pollack-Pelzner without due process and violated the school’s own regulations on academic freedom. The association’s governing council said the university didn’t hold a hearing before a selected group of faculty to provide cause for the dismissal. The university had adopted the recommended national standard that calls for such a hearing.

At the time, Nelson, Linfield University’s spokesperson, said by email that the university strongly disagreed with the censure.

In court records, Linfield’s attorney acknowledged Pollack-Pelzner “was not provided a hearing before a faculty committee at the time of termination” but argued that such a procedure wasn’t required, alleging his “breaches of his obligations to Linfield excused” the school “from any contractual obligation.”

Any harm to Pollack-Pelzner “was a result of his own misconduct,” attorney Paula A. Barran wrote.

As a faculty trustee, Pollack-Pelzner held a fiduciary position and “owed Linfield University a duty of undivided loyalty, utmost good faith, full, fair, and frank disclosure and fair dealing,” Barran and co-counsel Edwin A. Harnden wrote in response to the suit. They accused him of making false, disparaging statements about trustees and interfering with the university’s relationships with donors.

Davis, who signed the settlement, Monday was out of the country in Jamaica, invited to attend a career expo there. The Jamaica Observer newspaper featured a short blurb on the attendees, which Davis shared on his Instagram. It called Davis an “authority on entrepreneurship whose most recent work focuses on integrity, values and principles in the business world.”

Pollack-Pelzner said he never intended to pursue legal action until he was suddenly terminated.

He said he hopes the settlement shows, “If you don’t follow your own policies, you’ll have high costs to bear.”

He said he also hopes it pushes leaders at Linfield and other universities to seriously consider sexual harassment claims by students, faculty and staff.

“After two years of hitting a brick wall at Linfield University,” Pollack-Pelzner said he was heartened by the outpouring of support from students and other colleges and organizations around the world once he went public.

“When you speak up about a key principle -- even if your own employer doesn’t recognize it -- there are other people out there who will stand beside you,” he said.

-- Maxine Bernstein

Email mbernstein@oregonian.com; 503-221-8212

Follow on Twitter @maxoregonian

PHOTO: University staff washed off these chalk messages students wrote in support of fired English Prof. Daniel Pollack-Pelzner and threatened fines of $25 per day for unapproved chalkings on the campus. "Silence is not a solution,'' one message read.

PHOTO: Longtime Linfield trustee and university donor Ronni Lacroute, who had endowed Prof. Daniel Pollack-Pelzner’s chair to keep him at the private college in McMinnville, resigned in protest from the Linfield University board after Pollack-Pelzner's firing, saying she was appalled and could no longer serve in “good conscience.”

https://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2023/02/fired-linfield-university-professor.html

https://www.oregonlive.com/education/2023/02/fired-linfield-university-professor-wins-more-than-1-million-in-whistleblower-suit-against-college.html

:::::::::::::::::

Linfield University agrees to pay fired professor more than $1 million in whistleblower settlement

By Meerah Powell (OPB-Oregon Public Broadcasting) Feb. 6, 2023 12:55 p.m.

Daniel Pollack-Pelzner had sued the university nearly two years ago when he was fired after airing allegations of sexual misconduct and antisemitism from Linfield leaders

Nearly two years of litigation between Linfield University and fired professor Daniel Pollack-Pelzner has come to an end in the form of a more than $1 million settlement.

Pollack-Pelzner, a tenured professor at the private university in McMinnville, was fired in April 2021 after he publicly shared allegations of sexual misconduct from students and staff involving university board members, including the Linfield president. Pollack-Pelzner, who is Jewish, also shared antisemitic comments he said came from the president and other university leaders.

Linfield said at the time through a statement that Pollack-Pelzner was fired “for serious breaches of the individual’s duty to the institution.”

Pollack-Pelzner and his attorney announced the settlement Monday morning.

“Everyone should be able to work and study without fear of discrimination or harassment, and everyone should be able to report their safety concerns without fear of retaliation,” Pollack-Pelzner said in a statement. “I’m grateful for the many students, alumni, and colleagues who joined me in demanding change and refused to be silenced when Linfield failed to uphold these essential principles.”

Pollack-Pelzner is currently a visiting scholar at Portland State University and scholar-in-residence at the Portland Shakespeare Project.

The settlement was first reported by The Oregonian/Oregonlive.

Along with some members of the Linfield community, Pollack-Pelzner had also gotten public support from groups such as the American Association of University Professors, the Pacific Northwest Anti-Defamation League and the Oregon Board of Rabbis.

Linfield Associate Vice President for Strategic Communications and Chief Marketing Officer Scott Nelson said Monday in a statement that although the university was confident in the outcome of litigation ending in its favor, defending itself against the lawsuit “diverts time and energy from the mission of the institution.”

He continued: “We felt it preferable to resolve this situation and move on.”

Nelson said the university’s insurers recommended the settlement, and he said it’s unlikely to impact the university’s finances moving forward.

“More importantly, this agreement allows Linfield to focus on building and expanding upon its rich educational heritage and creating a welcoming community for all,” Nelson said.

According to the settlement, sent to OPB from Pollack-Pelzner’s attorney, the university has agreed to pay the former professor $1,037,500. Pollack-Pelzner’s lawsuit through Multnomah County Circuit Court and Linfield’s counterclaim will be dismissed with prejudice, meaning they will not be able to file similar litigation again.

Pollack-Pelzner and Linfield have agreed to not sue each other for any reason in the future, according to the settlement agreement.

 

https://www.opb.org/article/2023/02/06/linfield-university-agrees-pay-fired-professor-one-million-whistelblower-settlement

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Linfield to pay ex-professor $1M in whistleblowing lawsuit  

by: Hailey Dunn, KOIN-TV Portland, Posted: Feb 6, 2023 / 10:58 AM PST  Updated: Feb 6, 2023 / 10:58 AM PST

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — Linfield University has agreed to pay $1 million to a former English professor who accused the private McMinnville school of unlawfully firing him for whistleblowing.

In July 2021, Dr. Daniel Pollack-Pelzner filed a lawsuit claiming that the university unlawfully terminated him for calling attention to reports made by students and faculty alleging university trustees and the president of sexual harassment.

Linfield fired Pollack-Pelzner on April 27 after he allegedly spread false statements about the university, employees and the trustees, Pamplin Media Group first reported.

Following an investigation into Pollack-Pelzner’s termination, the American Association of University Professors found Linfield had violated generally-accepted principles of academic freedom. This finding led AAUP to add Linfield University to its list of censured administrations.

According to the AAUP, Pollack-Pelzner was “fulfilling his responsibilities as the faculty’s elected representative to the board of trustees, and his speech and conduct were protected by principles of academic freedom.”

The lawsuit claimed Pollack-Pelzner “engaged in legally protected activity when he took Linfield trustees and administrators to task for not adequately addressing campus safety issues.”

Multiple Linfield staff members stepped down after Pollack-Pelzner was fired.

“Everyone should be able to work and study without fear of discrimination or harassment, and everyone should be able to report their safety concerns without fear of retaliation,” said Pollack Pelzner. “I’m grateful for the many students, alumni, and colleagues who joined me in demanding change and refused to be silenced when Linfield failed to uphold these essential principles.”

Pollack-Pelzner has since joined Portland State University as a visiting scholar and a scholar-in-residence at the Portland Shakespeare Project.

https://www.koin.com/news/oregon/linfield-to-pay-ex-professor-1m-in-whistleblowing-lawsuit

 

::::

 

US university that fired teacher who reported antisemitism settles with him for $1m

Linfield University in Oregon ends lawsuit filed by English professor Daniel Pollack-Pelzner, who said school’s president made antisemitic remarks

By Andrew Lapin  The Times of Israel 2/7/2023

JTA (Jewish Telegraphic Agenc) — A university in Oregon that fired a Jewish professor after he reported several incidents, including purported antisemitic remarks made by the school’s president, has settled with the professor.

Linfield University, a private school in McMinnville, will pay $1 million to English professor Daniel Pollack-Pelzner for his wrongful termination in 2021.

Pollack-Pelzner had accused the school’s president, Miles K. Davis, of making antisemitic remarks in front of him, including jokes about gas chambers and comments on the size of Jewish noses.

He was fired shortly after he went public with these and other accusations, including some regarding allegations of sexual harassment directed at members of the school’s board of trustees.

After his termination, Pollack-Pelzner, who was tenured, sued the school for $4 million. A report on his firing last year by the American Association of University Professors found that Linfield had violated Pollack-Pelzner’s academic freedom and right to due process.

The settlement shields the university from further legal action by Pollack-Pelzner, but does not prevent him from talking about the case. A spokesperson for Pollack-Pelzner’s law firm told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency the settlement does not include details about any particular claims he made against the university, nor does it require the school to apologize to him.

Several people affiliated with Linfield left the university in solidarity with Pollack-Pelzner in the wake of his firing, including the trustee who had endowed the professor’s chair in the English department, and the director of the school’s vaunted wine studies program.

Linfield is affiliated with American Baptist Churches.

Pollack-Pelzner is currently a visiting professor at Portland State University and scholar-in-residence at the Portland Shakespeare Project.

Davis remains in his position as Linfield’s president nearly three years after Pollack-Pelzner’s firing, despite calls from the Anti-Defamation League, the Oregon Board of Rabbis and other groups for his resignation.

 

https://www.timesofisrael.com/us-university-that-fired-teacher-who-reported-antisemitism-settles-with-him-for-1m/