News
April 25, 2008
Actions over Bresch degree give WVU 'black eye,' professor says

The topic of resignations will no doubt arise during Monday's meeting of the executive committee of the West Virginia University Faculty Senate.

That's according to Arthur Jacknowitz, a WVU professor and leader in the faculty senate.

Some committee members may ask for the resignation of administrators involved in granting an undeserved master's degree to Heather Bresch, Gov. Joe Manchin's daughter.

Jacknowitz said the actions of the university's administration have given the school a "black eye" and have "frustrated" and "embarrassed" faculty and staff.

However, Jacknowitz also said faculty and staff need time to process the report before issuing demands for disciplinary action.

"People have to digest and figure out what way to go," he said. "What I can tell you is people make mistakes. Whether those mistakes are fatal to those people is yet to be determined."

On Wednesday, a five-member panel appointed by WVU Provost Gerald Lang and the faculty senate issued a report stating the decision of high-ranking academic officers and administration officials to retroactively award Bresch a master's degree last year was "seriously flawed and reflected poor judgment."

The panel concluded administrators lacked documentation to prove Bresch's claim that she substituted work experience for her final 10 credit hours in 1998. It also maintains administrators relied too heavily on unconfirmed verbal assertions and caved to political pressure.

The report placed much of the blame on Lang and business school dean Steve Sears, who the report said had no reliable academic reason to give Bresch the degree.

Lang and Sears have defended their actions as "a judgment call," made with the limited available records.

But the panel said that administrators were "driven primarily and inappropriately by concerns about public relations and by Ms. Bresch's high profile. She was, in fact, treated in an unusual and unique manner."

Bresch's employer, Mylan Inc., is based in Canonsburg, Pa., and has a lab in Morgantown. The company's chairman, Milan Puskar, is a benefactor of Bresch's father and donated $20 million to WVU in 2003 for its athletic department and scholarships. The school's football stadium is named after him.

Questions about her degree first arose after Bresch was promoted to chief operating officer at Mylan in October. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called WVU to confirm that Bresch had a master's degree, and was told that she did not.

WVU retroactively awarded Bresch the degree in October.

The report did not specifically find fault with Garrison, who is a family friend and former business associate of Bresch.

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