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E. Gordon Gee (President West Virginia U.)

Myself and the wife went to the Game. After the game we went out on the field and were walking around taking pictures. I turn around and there is Dr. Gee walking around also, asking everyone if they were having a good time, taking pictures, etc.

Stuff like that, just shows me how much more Gee gets it then some former presidents of this university. Obviously all the academic stuff it very important, and what makes the university one of the greatest in the country. But Dr. Gee gets that things like sports, intramural, and having a good time with friends is a BIG part of the college experience, and really is what gets the average alumni to donate money to the university.
 
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buckeyefool;1337974; said:
Myself and the wife went to the Game. After the game we went out on the field and were walking around taking pictures. I turn around and there is Dr. Gee walking around also, asking everyone if they were having a good time, taking pictures, etc.

Stuff like that, just shows me how much more Gee gets it then some former presidents of this university. Obviously all the academic stuff it very important, and what makes the university one of the greatest in the country. But Dr. Gee gets that things like sports, intramural, and having a good time with friends is a BIG part of the college experience, and really is what gets the average alumni to donate money to the university.

Couldnt agree more with you!!! I am an OSU grad student, check out this email from Dr. Gee...he just gets it!!!

Dear Students:
Thanksgiving nears, and our thoughts turn to those things for which we are most grateful. As president of this great University, I feel blessed beyond measure for countless reasons. Below, I share the Top 10 things I am grateful for this Thanksgiving:
10. Your 384,000 hours of community service last year
9. Warhol at the Wexner Center
8. Our remarkable faculty, whose research ranks us 9th nationally
7. The Best Damn Band in the Land
6. Ohio State?s most-qualified freshman class ever
5. Senator John Glenn, for his service to the University, the state, and the nation
4. Students? overwhelming participation in this month?s elections
3. Our first LEED-certified building (Nationwide & Ohio Farm Bureau 4-H Center)
2. Ohio State?s huge contingent of international students, 14th-largest nationally
1. 42-7 ? enough said!
Best wishes for a relaxing and enjoyable holiday.
Gordon Gee

EDIT - Whoops...didn't the the post two above mine lol
 
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Dispatch

Still against a playoff, but not averse to change
Q&A with E. Gordon Gee
Sunday, December 7, 2008 3:42 AM
By Tim May


THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
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E.Gordon Gee is an unabashed cheerleader for major-college football. He also totes a larger megaphone than most, now that he is more than a year into his second term as president of Ohio State University.



He made headlines a year ago when he said, in regard to a possible extended major-college playoff, "They will have to wrestle it out of my cold, dead hands." In other words, Gee is a strong proponent of the Bowl Championship Series and its single title game, despite the debates it has spawned since its inception in 1998.
But is he an advocate for expansion of the 11-school Big Ten to 12 schools? Would he back a league football title game? What does he think about the escalating salaries of major-college football coaches?
He recently answered some of those questions and more:

Q: Do you see anything on the horizon in terms of adding a 12th school to the Big Ten?
A: You know, I did when I was here the first time (1990-97) and we did do a Kabuki dance about that. ? I think there is always that possibility, but I have no inclination whether any of those discussions are taking place.

Continued...........
 
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$1 MILLION PLEDGE
Gee to endow annual grants


The Columbus Dispatch : Gee to endow annual grants

As the economy continues to crumble, Ohio State University's president wants a stronger emphasis on raising money for student scholarships.

To show his personal commitment, E. Gordon Gee has pledged $1 million to create an endowed fund that will cover tuition and fees for one student at each class rank -- freshman, sophomore, junior and senior. The scholarships each will last four years.
 
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The 10 Best College Presidents
Ohio State's Gee and nine other dynamos
The Big Man on Campus
By DAVID VON DREHLE / COLUMBUS Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2009

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Gordon Gee's school is known for football and a band that marches in cursive, but universities today must be engines of regional economies, he says. Not all college presidents agree.
Justin Steele for TIME

Even in Ohio, where the Taft name rings a loud bell, it takes a rare talent to hold an audience rapt while telling a long anecdote about William Howard Taft, a President known mainly for his girth. But E. Gordon Gee can do it. Gee (pronounced with a hard G, like a cowboy's gee-tar) is telling his Taft story to a group of solid, sunburned citizens at an inn in Ohio tractor country, and a less likely looking fellow would be hard to conjure in this place. He is dressed, as usual, in a fresh-pressed suit, argyle socks, horn-rimmed glasses and a bright bow tie. Half Orville Redenbacher, half Harold Hill, the fast-talking Gee, a lawyer by training, fits into rural Knox County about as well as the Geico gecko would blend into American Gothic. And yet, as he finally approaches the thoroughly forgettable punch line, Gee and his audience are laughing together as the piles of French toast and sausages go cold on the tables. Gee doesn't mind. He prefers nutritious smoothies at his mansion back in the city.

In other words, this is a thoroughbred politician. Gee shakes hands with gusto and appears delighted by everyone he meets. Peering around the room, he cries out gleefully, "Where are our county commissioners?" A couple of hands go up, and he exults, "I love you guys!" What about state legislators? There's one in the corner. "I love you too!" giggles Gee. Everyone wants a word and a picture with him, and when the time comes to depart, he somehow radiates reluctance even as he quicksteps toward a waiting car. Goodbye, goodbye! How dearly he would love to tarry with his new friends, but the good people of Tuscarawas County are waiting, and after them the yeomen of Holmes and Muskingum. There are 88 counties in Ohio, and Gee is in the process of barnstorming through every one of them. Again. (See nine college presidents to watch.)

A poll a while back found that he could easily be elected governor in a state that calls itself the Cradle of Presidents. Gee, however, has something different in mind. As president of the Ohio State University and one of the most experienced university executives in the U.S., he is campaigning for a revolution in higher education at a time when the field is more important, and perhaps more troubled, than ever before.

In a world where brainpower outstrips muscle power, where innovation trumps conformity, where the nimble and creative stand to inherit the earth, higher education is the key to the next American century. Forget the ivory tower: colleges and universities are catalysts of economic development, stewards of public health, incubators of social policy and laboratories of discovery. Nearly every great national challenge ? from the raising of our children to the quality of our food supply, from the hunt for clean energy to the struggle against insurgent enemies, from the quest for opportunity to the search for sustainable prosperity ? depends for a solution on institutions of higher ed. Classrooms and labs are today what mines and factories were a century ago: America's regional economic powerhouses, one of the few certain engines of growth in good and bad economic times. As a result of these challenges and opportunities, college presidents are on the line as never before ? and must be accessible and accountable to the public in a way that rivals or even surpasses what is required of public officials.

Read more: E. Gordon Gee: The Big Man on Campus - The 10 Best College Presidents - TIME
 
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Ohio State is No. 1 - in president's pay
By Ben Rooney, staff reporter
January 18, 2010

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Ohio State University is No. 1 again, but not in football or basketball. For the second year in a row, the school's president was the highest paid public university executive in the United States, according to a study published Monday.

The Chronicle of Higher Education said E. Gordon Gee, Ohio State's president, took home $1.6 million last year, up from $1.3 million in 2008.

Mark Emmert, president of the University of Washington, was the second highest paid executive in the survey, with total compensation of over $900,000 last year. Patrick Harker, president of the University of Delaware, came in third with over $810,000 in total income.

Ohio State president is tops in public college pay - Jan. 18, 2010
 
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University president re-examines tenure - Education- msnbc.com

Leader of largest U.S. university takes on tenure

Emphasis on research, publishing in job-for-life protection called outdated



APTRANS.gif
updated 7:57 p.m. ET, Thurs., Feb. 4, 2010

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The leader of the country's largest university thinks it's time to re-examine how professors are awarded tenure, a type of job-for-life protection virtually unknown outside academia.
Ohio State University President Gordon Gee says the traditional formula that rewards publishing in scholarly journals over excellence in teaching and other contributions is outdated and too often favors the quantity of a professor's output over quality.
"Someone should gain recognition at the university for writing the great American novel or for discovering the cure for cancer," he told The Associated Press. "In a very complex world, you can no longer expect everyone to be great at everything."
Plenty of people have raised the issue over the years, but Gee is one of the few American college presidents with the reputation and political prowess ? not to mention the golden touch at fundraising ? who might be able to begin the transformation.
Still, some professors are already skeptical.
 
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E. Gordon Gee: Bow-tied ball of fire
If you want to keep up with OSU's president, you'd better have your track shoes laced tight, your wit sharp and your mind focused
Monday, March 22, 2010
By Encarnacion Pyle
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

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JONATHAN QUILTER | DISPATCH
Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee prepares to tape a short recruiting video to be sent to students selected for one of two prestigious scholarships. Gee's quip before making his pitch might be included as an outtake.


To spend a day with Ohio State University President E. Gordon Gee is to hear jokes, a lot of them. Although he runs a mammoth institution - with a $4.37 billion budget, 27,547 employees and 63,217 students - Gee is known as much for his colorful character as he is for his actions at Ohio State.

But each day, he must play a variety of roles: boss, politician, promoter and entertainer, among others. To capture a better sense of how Gee manages all those responsibilities, The Dispatch shadowed him on March 11 to capture a typical day.

E. Gordon Gee: Bow-tied ball of fire | The Columbus Dispatch
 
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Does He Have a Point or is it Sour Grapes?

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=5845736
Ohio St. prez disregards TCU, Boise St.


Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Even if TCU and Boise State run the table, they still don't deserve to be in the Bowl Championship Series title game, Ohio State president E. Gordon Gee said Wednesday.
In an interview with The Associated Press, the president at the university with the largest athletic program in the country said that TCU and Boise State do not face a difficult enough schedule to play in the national championship game.
"Well, I don't know enough about the Xs and Os of college football," said Gee, formerly the president at West Virginia, Colorado, Brown and Vanderbilt universities. "I do know, having been both a Southeastern Conference president and a Big Ten president, that it's like murderer's row every week for these schools. We do not play the Little Sisters of the Poor. We play very fine schools on any given day.
"So I think until a university runs through that gauntlet that there's some reason to believe that they not be the best teams to [be] in the big ballgame."
Gee, long an admirer of the BCS and the current bowl system, said he was against a playoff in the Football Bowl Subdivision.
"If you put a gun to my head and said, 'What are you going to do about a playoff system [if] the BCS system as it now exists goes away?' I would vote immediately to go back to the bowl system," he said.
He said the current system is better for the student-athletes.
"It's not about this incessant drive to have a national championship because I think that's a slippery slope to professionalism," he said. "I'm a fan of the bowl system and I think that by and large it's worked very, very well."
He cited Ohio State's presence in the 2007 national title game as an example.
The Buckeyes won their first 10 games that season to rise to No. 1 before losing 26-21 at home to unranked Illinois. They fell all the way to No. 8 in the BCS rankings.
A series of upsets over the final weeks of the regular season and in other team's conference championship games led to the Buckeyes climbing all the way back to the No. 1 spot in the final BCS rankings. They were matched against an LSU team with two losses.
Ohio State led 10-0 early only to have LSU come back and score the next 31 points in a 38-24 victory at the Louisiana Superdome.
"You know, it's a mystery," Gee said. "We were No. 1 then No. 11 then No. 7 and we ended up playing for the national championship. I think I kind of like that mixed-up mystery."
While he was at Vanderbilt, Gee abolished the athletic department since it was underwritten by the university's general fund anyway. He said he has no problem with an Ohio State program that fields 36 intercollegiate varsity teams and has an annual budget exceeding $120 million.
"Here, athletics pays for itself and also pays for academic programs at the institution," he said. "The other thing, of course, that I take a look at and see how well we are doing in terms of that notion of balance, which is what I was all about at Vanderbilt, which I am all about here."
He said Ohio State's eighth-ranked football team, which plays rival Michigan on Saturday, is in the top 10 in the nation not only on the field but also in terms of academic progress.
"That's the kind of balance I want to have," he said.
I know that some people are upset about TCU and Boise being in contention for the NC, but I have to question the timing of Gee's comments. Saying these teams so late in the season seems like sour grapes to me. He knows that OSU needs a lot of help to get in the NC picture and is upset that they are stuck behind at least two teams that aren't likely to lose. If he had said these things at the beginning of the season when OSU was number 2, I would give him a lot more credibility. However, at this point it just comes off as childish and borderline jealous. I like Gee, but I think he is a little out of line. If he wants to be mad someone, he should be mad at OSU for losing. I would love to see the Buckeyes in the NC, but think that other teams are deserving as well.
 
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A Pac;1819138; said:
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=5845736

I know that some people are upset about TCU and Boise being in contention for the NC, but I have to question the timing of Gee's comments. Saying these teams so late in the season seems like sour grapes to me. He knows that OSU needs a lot of help to get in the NC picture and is upset that they are stuck behind at least two teams that aren't likely to lose. If he had said these things at the beginning of the season when OSU was number 2, I would give him a lot more credibility. However, at this point it just comes off as childish and borderline jealous. I like Gee, but I think he is a little out of line. If he wants to be mad someone, he should be mad at OSU for losing. I would love to see the Buckeyes in the NC, but think that other teams are deserving as well.

Sounds more to me like a reporter asked a question and he answered it.

BFD
 
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