RON MALY HAS BEEN WATCHING THE PARADE GO BY FOR A LONG TIME. THIS IS ONE OF HIS WEBSITES.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Julie Hermann is my kind of athletic director. She calls 'em like she sees 'em. Hermann is fairly new at Rutgers, the state university of New Jersey that will be a member of the Big Ten Cnference next fall. She's in the news now, the Associated Press reports via ESPN.com, after telling a class earlier this year that it would be "great" if New Jersey's largest newspaper went out of business. [That would be like the athletic director at Iowa State saying it would be great if the Des Moines Register went out of business]. Rutgers said in a statement today that Hermann's remarks to a media ethics and law class in February came before she knew about massive layoffs at the Newark Star-Ledger. The paper's parent company, Advance Publications, said last week that 300 employees at its newspapers and websites in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, including 170 at the Newark paper, will lose their jobs. [Sounds like the Gannett Co., owner of the Register and the Iowa City Press-Citizen, right?] "If they're not writing headlines that ae getting attention, they're not selling ads--and they die," Hermann said. "And the Ledger almost died in June, right?" A student responded, "They might die again next month." Said Hermann: "That would be great. I'm going to do all I can to not give them a headline to keep them alive." Hermann also said one person at the newspaper has "one mission, that's to get any AD at Rutgers fired." In a statement, Rutgers said Hermann's statements were "intended to give the students some understanding of the challenges she has faced" and were not expected to be made public. Hermann did not apologize. The Newark newspaper was the first to report in May that Hermann was accused of being verbally and emotionally abusive to volleyball players she coached at Tennessee in 1996. At Rutgers, she replaced Tim Pernetti, who was forced to resign because of his handling of men's basketball coach Mike Rice's situation at the school. Rice was fired a year ago after it came to light that he had verbally and physically abused players.
Julie Hermann, courtesy of U of L Card Game, com/ESPN.com