Thursday, September 11, 2008

Chicago Annenberg Challenge: Did the Univ. of Illinois "drop a dime" on Kurtz?

University of California-Santa Clara law professor Steve Diamond has been hot on the trail of the Chicago Annenberg Challenge records. A liberal, Diamond is no fan of Bill Ayers' so-called "progressive" activism. Diamond called in to Milt Rosenberg's Extension 720 program when Barack Obama's goons attempted to disrupt the show when Rosenberg had the audacity to have National Review's Stanley Kurtz on as a guest last month. Kurtz was invited on to Extension 720 to discuss what he discovered in the first days of his research.

The University of Illinois-Chicago houses the records, all 140 boxes of them. Kurtz, who has a Ph.D from Harvard in anthropology, was initially granted permission by UIC to inspect the paper trail of the $50 million project Barack Obama led for a few years--and one in which former Weather Underground terrorist secured the funding. But then the university said "No."

Did someone, to use gangster slang, "drop a dime" on Kurtz and contact former CAC executive director Ken Rolling--so he could prevent the release of the records?

Rolling's story was that he was surfing the web and discovered that there was discussion occurring about opening the CAC records to the public. That was on August 11.

Yet another Chicago coincidence.

From Diamond's blog:

So on August 11, Rolling told the Chicago Tribune, he saw references to CAC records and he called the library at UIC and asked if the CAC records were being made available and, if they were, to shut off public access.

The library complied.

On August 22 the University reversed its original decision and said the records were validly held by them and they made a finding aid available to the public.

Rolling then asked the University to prevent access to certain files based on his review of the records. He discussed this with the University's president, B. Joseph White, and University Counsel, Thomas Bearrows. These University executives agreed to give consideration to his request.

But Diamond goes on to explain that Kurtz' first contact with the University of Illinois was on--August 11.

Interesting.

Longtime readers of Marathon Pundit are aware of the sneakiness of the University of Illinois. I graduated from the university's Urbana-Champaign campus, and I never came across a class in the school's massive course catalog devoted to deviousness. But what do I know, I only have a bachelor's degree.

I should have an update in a few days on some U of I deviousness I began reporting on last year. But for now I've listed my earlier posts about how the university plotted to deny promised scholarships to some War on Terror veterans.

Related posts:

Marathon Pundit exclusive: Van der Hooning wins five of six counts in case against Univ. of Illinois

Scandal update: Lt. Gov. Quinn wants count of vets in Univ. of Ill. MBA program

Broken promises: How "jarheads" got shunted aside at the University of Illinois: A Marathon Pundit series

Marathon Pundit Exclusive: What happened behind the scenes of the University of Illinois veteran scholarship scandal

University of Illinois: "Hookers are Praised as Soldiers" –Marathon Pundit's Third Investigative Report

University of Illinois military scholarships scandal update

Exclusive: Van der Hooning, and Illinois vets, get a hearing at the Court of Claims

Marathon Pundit exclusive: Lt. Gov. Quinn's letter to U of I president about military scholarship scandal

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