Friday, February 9, 2007

Here Comes the Judge(ment)!


WORD HAS REACHED us here at DISSENT about the recent judgment against the now legendary former dean of Humanities and Languages, author of the book length poem, The Avenger of Blood, (Northrup University Press, 1987 and ranked 3,543,831 on Amazon as of this morning), lawyer, amateur architect, and current tenured professor of economics and political science at Saddleback--Howard Gensler.

Yes, Howard lost.

Howard, ever litigious, sued the district asserting that both his chair and his dean [wrongfully -CW] denied his request to teach six classes over the course of last summer. (Six! Zounds! The man is a teaching machine!) The chair recommended four classes and the dean eventually assigned him three. Howard took offense and he was off to court.

The judgment features figures well known to Dissent readers, including Sherry Miller-White and Armando Ruiz (offering declarations in support of Howard, natch.) -- but at its heart is Howard's glorious tortured, twisted logic. Ah, it takes me back.

Details to follow, right Chunk?

NOTE FROM CHUNK:

I Googled "Howard Gensler" and "Board of trustees" and up popped the judgment: Gensler loses appeal. Here's the last paragraph:

Since there has been no showing that the decision to deny Genlser's request to teach six summer session classes was arbitrary or capricious, and it is supported by the evidence, the petition for writ of mandate was properly denied. The judgment is affirmed. Respondent is entitled to costs on appeal.

I especially like that last line. I like it very much indeed. --CW

UPDATE: a lawyer friend informs me that "costs" will not likely amount to much in the case of an appeal (filing fees). "Attorney fees" would have been another matter entirely.

Above: an actual illustration from Howard's "epic poem". Really.

For more on the Howard Gensler saga, see The Howard Hilton

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

How can you teach 6 classes over the summer? That's THREE per session.

Anonymous said...

Refresh my memory...WHo hired Gensler? Who praised his talents? Who is responsible?

Anonymous said...

"costs on appeal"?

Does that mean Howard has to pay $$$?

Now he'll really need to teach overload!

Anonymous said...

Do you really think Raghu is going to allow the district to get money out of his favorite son? Come on.

Anonymous said...

Ah yes, the mean, sick lunatic that Raghu put in place and Glenn refused to get rid of. Funny, I don't remember hearing an apology for sticking that whack job in our midst and letting him belittle, harass, and demoralize. Any wonder so many of us are still angry?

Anonymous said...

Goo, 10:05! GOO!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

My money (such as it is) is on the district deciding NOT to recoup their costs defending themselves -- after all, Howard has been so useful to them in the past - he deserves some consideration now. you can bet Raghu is behind it already.

How can we find out whether or not they go after him?

Anonymous said...

ah yes, Howard.

You mean the fellow who made untoward, unprofessional and plainly threatening remarks to many and was then moved into the classroom to teach? The timebomb?

The one who is really going to cost the district if he ever acts like that with a student and the student discovers the hush-hush move-him-around strategy the district deployed in his favor?

Talk about a lawsuit.

But who cares - did Howard single-handedly save the economy of China? That's what I hear.

Who tenured this fellow?

Anonymous said...

Who tenured Howie? The same people who awarded him with a cheesy little pin for working 10 years in the district...when he'd only been a part-time instructor for most of those years. Process, schmocess!

Anonymous said...

IF he ever acts like that with A student? Check ratemyprofessors.com -- which also, by the way, offers other opportunities to read Gensler-written fiction, since he puffs himself on the site when his numbers get too low.

Anonymous said...

OK, now I get the Gensler saga... :-)

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...