Yep, and that is in part due to Minnesota's so-called 'left-wing' culture, i.e. highly educated, progressive, good schools and so forth. Let the flames begin.
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If you had read the very last paragraph you would have seen this:
'The University of Minnesota should hire the best possible candidate to run its athletic department. If the school ends up joining that new era by choosing a highly qualified woman, it will have taken a key step in dismantling the old-boys’ network that’s run the show for too long.'
Re-read that first sentence please. The author clearly states the U should hire the best possible candidate.
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Re-read that paragraph, not one single 'but' in the entire paragraph. Not one single statement in the entire article that, to use your words, 'infers that only a woman can dismantle the old-boys network.' By the way, you are the one who is inferring. The word you probably meant to use was imply, not infer. You may infer that was what the article was implying. I happen to disagree with you....and then promptly adds an obvious "BUT..." inferring that if they do NOT hire a woman, they will be perpetuating an 'old-boys' network that has run the show for far too long."
This clearly infers that only a woman can dismantle the 'old-boys network, which is clearly not true and is gender stereotyping.
Re-read that paragraph, not one single 'but' in the entire paragraph. Not one single statement in the entire article that, to use your words, 'infers that only a woman can dismantle the old-boys network.' By the way, you are the one who is inferring. The word you probably meant to use was imply, not infer. You may infer that was what the article was implying. I happen to disagree with you.
I will infer from your post, however, that you do agree there is an old-boys network.
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I apologize for correcting your grammar. I generally avoid doing that because I know it's rude, and everyone makes mistakes. I know I do regularly, perhaps even in this post. But the difference in meaning between infer and imply can often lead to misunderstanding so I felt compelled to point that out. I was wrong to do that.I will infer that since you have resorted to correcting internet grammar, you are unable to find any more meaningful error in my logic.
You are correct on two points: there may be an old boys' network, and there is no 'but' in that quote.
In fact, the Strib goes even further: they state (not implying, but unconditionally) that by "hiring a well qualified woman it (the U) WILL have taken a key step in dismantling the old boy's network." Will. Not 'might', or 'may', but WILL.
Again, there is no guaranteed certainty (as the Strib suggests) that a 'well-qualified woman' will do anything. She could come in, rest on her track record and sit around do nothing and collect a paycheck until fired. Female gender does not preclude poor performance or certainty to act in any manner (unless you make sweeping generalizations about women, as I infer the Strib is doing). Likewise, there is no reason to believe a man does not exist that can dismantle the old-boys network.
Back to your response: of course female gender doesn't preclude poor performance. Neither does male gender, but you guys keep getting hired anyway. Good thing, huh? And in fact people of the male gender have been 100% of the ADs throughout the history of the U, unless you count our current interim AD and the women who held the position of Women's AD. And I don't really see you guys in danger of becoming a minority in the AD job position any time soon.
Answer this question. Do you believe there is no woman who can do this job? If your answer is no, that there probably are qualified women, then the Strib is right, those women should be considered. Do you know for a fact that none of the women mentioned by the editorial are qualified? By the way, I don't know if any of the women mentioned are qualified either, but at least they are offering names of women who actually are ADs.
Or do you believe no woman is qualified?
By the way, the Strib is right. If they do hire a qualified woman they will be sending a message that they know women are capable of doing the job, and that most certainly is a good step in dismantling the old-boys network.
So for the Strib to claim hiring a woman WILL change that type of environment, I claim, is bestowing upon women in general qualities exhibited by some women and certainly not exhibited by other women. I.E. gender stereotyping.
If Beth Goetz performed admirably during her interim tenure which may extend until next Spring, then she should be seriously considered.
Why spend money on a search firm that served us Teague when we may already have an excellent qualified person under our noses?
Why is it so contentious to propose that a woman might be qualified for this job and that qualified women should be considered? Why does that automatically become a trigger for claims of gender bias against men. Are some of you guys really that insecure?
Would she be able to serve as Athletic Director without leaving the kitchen? How is she gonna cook?
... If there are two equally qualified candidates, male and female, and gender is actually NO issue, then the gender neutral response would be something like, let's draw the name out of a hat. Not, gee it sure would be great to hire a woman. It's fine if you think that way, but don't try and pretend it isn't showing a gender bias.
This is quoting one woman's opinion, not a claim by the Star Tribune that a woman would be the most qualified.It’s also worth noting that two of Minnesota’s Big Ten peers, Penn State and Rutgers, recently turned to women to lead their athletic departments in the wake of scandals. “I do think women have a way over time of coming in and fixing things — in all parts of our culture,” Phillips said.
...to get back to the question of Beth Goetz, I agree with the folks above. If she were to come in and do a few things to improve game-day atmosphere, and we started to hear stories that she has a great rapport with donors and alum, I think that would be about all it takes for me to say sign her up. It's definitely in the realm of possibility..
It would be refreshing to read a single Strib article related to sports that doesn't have incorrect information, a typo, or a grammatical error. "A women?" Really?
Why spend money on a search firm that served us Teague when we may already have an excellent qualified person under our noses?
The person making the grammatical error was the one who posted this thread, not the Star Tribune. Read the actual editorial.
If you go to the posted link the title has correct grammar. Did you actually see incorrect grammar when you read the original editorial, or are you seeing it in this post and blaming it on the Star Tribune? It's entirely possible it could have been incorrect when originally published, then corrected later when they caught their own error, it happens. I'm sure you also make grammar errors from time to time.I wish that were true. I read the article on the Strib website not long after it was posted. I assume the person who posted the article just copied and pasted the title.