September 2004
See also:
Letter from the NVIC to Palmer College
Palmer cracks down on critics
Academic freedom has
apparently become the latest victim of the new administration at Palmer
Chiropractic College, with one more speaker being "uninvited" to campus
functions and another harassed for canceling a speaking engagement at the
school.
Gene Cretsinger, DC,
chair of the International Chiropractors Association Assembly, had been
invited by the Vice President of the Palmer Student Alumni, Jim Bolton, to
speak to students on their regular "Spizz Night" event in July.
He was told that he
would share the platform with an ACA spokesperson and speak about their
ideologies on the direction of Palmer College and chiropractic. A question
and answer session was to follow the presentations.
Dr. Cretsinger accepted
the invitation, only to learn later that the college administration would
not "approve" him as a speaker.
In a letter to Palmer
Interim President Donald Kern, DC, Cretsinger noted that, "I know I differ
with you and the ACA on the actions Palmer is taking to shape the education
of the students, yet I do not understand why you would deny me the
opportunity to voice my ideas regarding this direction. You say Palmer is an
ICA and an ACA college. I pay my dues to the PCC Alumni Association. I am
Chairman of the ICA Representative Assembly, the President of the
Distinguished Fellows of the ICA and on the ICA Executive Committee. I
cannot say that the ICA organization is in agreement with all of my ideas
about Palmer but I can say that the ICA has appreciated the ideas I hold
about chiropractic and my work in understanding the philosophy establishing
chiropractic as an essential worldwide health component."
He then asked Dr. Kern,
to "explain to me why I was denied opportunity to speak to the students
attending the Spizz Night event."
Another scheduled
speaker, Barbara Loe Fisher, founder and president of the National Vaccine
Information Center (NVIC), declined to speak at the school after Palmer
"uninvited" Terry A. Rondberg, DC, President of the World Chiropractic
Alliance from its homecoming.
In a letter to Kern
(reprinted in this issue) she explained that, "If Dr. Riekeman and Dr.
Rondberg are not welcome on your campus because they do not share the same
values and philosophy that you and the new administration do, then I am
quite sure you would be uncomfortable with my presentation. I have never
canceled a presentation for other than personal health or family reasons but
I cannot speak on a campus where my friends and loyal supporters are not
welcome."
In response, she told
Rondberg, Clay Tuttle, DC, Palmer Director of Alumni sent her "several nasty
notes" and demanded that she pay for the airplane tickets the school had
purchased for her trip. Before she could make arrangement to pay for the
unused tickets, the school turned the account over to an attorney.
The heavy handed
actions apparently weren't limited to outsiders, however. According to one
report, unverified at press time, the school has also closed the Palmer
mansion, supposedly in order to inventory its contents.
Students reported that
on August 2, 2004, Palmer security guards escorted Jolene Mesch, the Mansion
Coordinator out of her office and changed the locks. Alana Calander, the
head of Palmer's history foundation and her assistant, Roger Hines arrived
at their offices to find their locks had already been changed.
Days earlier, the
college announced that it was purchasing a three‑story building at 300 Brady
St. to house the Palmer Family Museum, a private museum that would be owned
and run by Vickie Anne Palmer, who chairs the Palmer College board of
trustees. The building would also be headquarters of the Vickie Anne Palmer
Foundation and Ms. Palmer's World Leadership Institute.
Larry Patten, a former
chief operating officer of Palmer University, serves as president of both
the Palmer foundation and the World Leadership Institute. He resigned his
COO position in 1997 after an investigation into possible spending
irregularities led students and alumni to pass a "vote of no confidence."
The timing of the
actions led some students to wonder if the Mansion's contents would be
appropriated for Ms. Palmer's personal museum. One student wrote to the WCA
and asked, "Is it a conflict of interest for the Chair of a Board whose
responsibility it is to protect the assets of the Palmer Foundation for
Chiropractic History to open a museum, under another foundation which the
Chair owns, and coerce the board to transfer artifacts to her privately
owned museum?"
Feeling a backlash from
students and alumni, the school did manage to diffuse another potentially
explosive situation.
It had been rumored
that the school would not permit former President Guy F. Riekeman, DC, to
attend the graduation of his daughter and son‑in‑law. According to the
Quad City Times he was permitted on campus for the event only after
"several weeks of negotiations between attorneys for the school and for
Riekeman." The school's official statement implied that the reason for its
action was to "maintain the dignity and decorum of the graduation ceremony
for all students and families."
Other supporters of
Riekeman have felt the brunt of Palmer's displeasure in recent months.
William Jarr, former
vice president of operations and finance, was fired shortly after Riekeman's
resignation. He has since filed a lawsuit in Scott County District Court
against the school, saying he was dismissed without cause and that the
termination of compensation and benefits was a breach of his contract.
Several others who
served under Riekeman have either resigned or been fired.
********