<style> p {margin-top:0px;margin-bottom:0px;} </style> <table border=0 width=100%% cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 align=center> <tr> <td valign=top style='padding:8pt;'><font size=2><p class="MsoNormal"><b><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"><font size="4">Author's <br>Note</font></span></b><font size="4"><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);">: NSA received <br>accreditation from TRACS <span lang="en-us">on November 29</span>, 2005. This text has been revised as new <br>information has come to light. Even though I clearly marked this letter "private <br>and confidential," Dr. Russell Fitzgerald, Executive Editor of TRACS, shared it <br>with Roy Atwood, <span lang="en-us">President</span> of New St. Andrews College. <br><br><br><br>February 17, 2004<br><br><br><br>Transnational Association of<br><br>Christian Colleges and Schools <br><br>P.O. Box 328<br><br>Forest, Virginia 24551<br><br><br><br><b>Private and Confidential<br><br><br><br></b>Dear TRACS Officials:<br><br><br><br>I!
am writing concerning the accreditation of New St. Andrews College (NSA) in <br>Moscow, Idaho. Let me first introduce myself. I just retired from 31 years of <br>teaching at the University of Idaho in the Department of Philosophy. For 23 <br>years I was Coordinator of Religious Studies. <span lang="en-us">In 2002-2003</span> I was President of the <br>Pacific Northwest Region of the AAR/SBL/ASOR. My CV can be found at </span><br><a href="http://www.class.uidaho.edu/ngier/vitanick.html" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;"><br>www.class.uidaho.edu/ngier/vitanick.html</a><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);">.<br><br><br><br>I have known the principals at NSA--Douglas Wilson, Douglas Jones, and Roy <br>Atwood--for many years. Wilson was a philosophy major and took an M.A. from our <br>department in 1977. Both Wilson and Jones were lecturers for us for several <br>years. I’ve known Atwood since he first came to the University of Idaho, <br>where he was a well res!
pected administrator and teacher/scholar. Because of <br>these close a
ssociations I have requested that you keep this letter private and <br>confidential.<br><br><br><br></span>In a letter to the <i>Moscow-Pullman Daily News</i> (May 22, 2003), <br>Atwood stated that his college was an accredited institution. He stated that <br>“we'll inform our national accreditors (<a href="http://www.tracs.org/" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;">www.tracs.org</a>) <br>that U. S. Department of Education and the Council for Higher Education <br>Accreditation recognition does not constitute 'proper accreditation.’” Instead <br>of explicitly stating who NSA’s accrediting agency was, he gave readers the <br>impression that NSA was accredited by the Department of Education and the CHEA. <br>Later in the letter he did spell out the name of a prestigious liberal arts <br>agency, one with which he presumably would rather be associated.<br><br><br><br>I wrote to Atwood and asked him to clarify his original letter with a follow-up <br>letter in !
the newspaper. I also requested that he also state that NSA was only a <br>candidate for accreditation, not actually accredited. Atwood declined my <br>invitation to set the record straight.<br><br><br><br>It has now come to my attention that Greg Dickison, attorney for Christ Church, <br>claimed that NSA was accredited at Latah County Board of Equalization hearing in <br>April 2003. The result of that hearing was that Christ Church lost its tax <br>exemption on two of three parcels of property in downtown Moscow. You can hear <br>Dickison's own voice at<br><a href="http://www.tomandrodna.com/temp/NSA_Accred.mp3" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;"><br>http://www.tomandrodna.com/temp/NSA_Accred.mp3</a>. <br><br><br><br>Atwood's rebuff led me to do more research about NSA, and if I were on any <br>accrediting team, I would be concerned about the following:</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal"> </p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><spa!
n style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font si
ze="4"><span lang="en-us">73 <br>percent</span> of NSA's faculty do not have PhDs. NSA has the resources to hire PhDs., <br>but evidently chooses not to do so. Since the first version of this letter, all <br>NSA faculty, except one visiting lecturer, have the masters degree that is <br>required by TRACS. However, TRACS does require that the degree be in the <br>teaching area, but Ben Merkle's M.A. in English does not qualify him to teach <br>Hebrew or theology as he regularly does at NSA.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Of <br>special concern is Wilson’s statement that a college degree is not necessary to <br>teach in the K-12 schools that his own association accredits. Indeed, <br>prospective teachers are warned that a degree from a secular institution might <br>place them at a disadvantage.<span lang="en-us"> Until recently NSA was <br>listed as an a!
ccredited school by Wilson's own Association of Classical <br>and Christian Schools.</span></font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">While <br>NSA was a candidate for accreditation, Roy Atwood was giving lectures around the <br>country on behalf of TRACS promoting "Trinitarian" accreditation.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Two <br>of NSA’s senior fellows, presumably equivalent to full professors, do not have <br>PhDs. Generally, a PhD is required at the lowest rank of assistant professor.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Although <br>full resumes are not available on NSA’s website, it appears that a majority of <br>the faculty!
s published books are from Canon Press, Wilson’s own creation. <br>
Atwood has admitted that Wilson’s slavery booklet is not a “scholarly work,” and <br>yet it appeared in Canon's Monograph Series, which usually showcases a press’s <br>most scholarly work.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Of <br>special concern is the fact that Wilson’s brother, his son, and his son-in-law <br>are on the NSA faculty.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Wilson <br>wrote an article “Why Evangelical Colleges Are Not” in <i>Chronicles</i> <br>(September, 1998), the journal of the far right Rockford Institute. The <br>hostility displayed against reputable evangelical colleges in this article not <br>only shows blatant disrespect for these fine schools, but it manifests shameful <br>disregard for the entire academic enterpris!
e. Over the 30 plus years I’ve been <br>active in the regional American Academy of Religion (AAR) and Society for <br>Biblical Literature (SBL), I’ve been impressed with the academic progress that <br>some regional evangelical schools have made. For our 2003 Moscow meeting 40 <br>percent of the papers presented came from these outstanding schools.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol; color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"><font size="4">·</font></span><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"><font size="4">On <br>April 1, 1999 NSA faculty and students were involved in an outrageous April <br>Fool’s stunt, complete with stealing UI letterhead and using the English <br>department’s FAX line, to announce an alleged UI sponsored lecture entitled <br>“Topless and Proud.” Wilson tells us how proud he was of his students' actions: <br>“By the time you receive this, our local police will probably have forgotten all <br>ab!
out it, so a little bragging is now safe, and perhaps it is even in or
der. But <br>first some background. Our local city council, through a series of ridiculous <br>circumstances, decided to quit restricting female toplessness. The noble senior <br>editor of this journal [Wilson’s son-in-law], encouraged by some winks and <br>nudges from me, not that he needed any, made up a flyer which announced a <br>topless and proud lecture series by topless feminist scholars.” See the full <br>text at </font></span><font size="4"><br><a href="http://www.credenda.org/issues/11-3meander.php" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;"><br>http://www.credenda.org/issues/11-3meander.php</a><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"> <br>and the police report at </span><br><a href="http://dougsplotch.com/looter.htm" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;"><br>http://dougsplotch.com/looter.htm</a></font><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"><font size="4"> <br>at the bottom of the page.</font></span></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: !
12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">In <br>the fall of 2002 I extended a special invitation to NSA students and faculty to <br>submit papers to the regional 2003 AAR/SBL meeting in Moscow. Typically, there <br>is a large turn out of students and faculty from schools in the vicinity of the <br>sponsoring institution. In a letter to the <i>Moscow Pullman Daily News,</i> I <br>expressed my disappointment that not a single NSA student or faculty attended <br>the conference. The accreditation issue then arose in Atwood’s response to that <br>letter, in which he told the community that NSA had <span lang="en-us">"</span>better things to do<span lang="en-us">"</span> than to <br>attend the meeting.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">In <br>October, 2003, the existence of <i>Southern Slavery As It Was</i> (Canon !
Press, <br>1996) co-authored by Wilson and Steve Wilkins was made know
n to the Moscow <br>community. It was later discovered that 20 percent of text had been lifted from<br><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);">Engerman and Fogel's <i>Time on the Cross</i></span>. <br>Wilson first said that proper citation was scrambled in the transmission of <br>Wilkins' portions of the text, but Wilkins later admitted to the errors (see <i><br>World </i>magazine, May 1, 2005). <span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);">A former member <br>of Wilson's congregation has looked at two other books written by Wilkins and he <br>has found problems there as well. Typically what he found was indented passages <br>that are indeed cited, but when one reads the books cited one discovers that, in <br>one instance, over 200 words that precede the indented passages are also copied <br>from that text.<span lang="en-us"> </span>For all the texts in question see </span><br><a href="http://www.tomandrodna.com/notonthepalouse/SPW.htm" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;"><!
br>www.tomandrodna.com/notonthepalouse/SPW.htm</a><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"> and<br></span><br><a href="http://www.tomandrodna.com/notonthepalouse/Plagiarism.htm" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;"><br>www.tomandrodna.com/notonthepalouse/Plagiarism.htm</a></font><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"><font size="4">.</font></span></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Among <br>many arresting statements in the slavery booklet is the following: “There has <br>never been a multi-racial society which has existed with such mutual intimacy <br>and harmony in the history of the world" (p. 24). The booklet caused an uproar <br>in the community, and two UI historians wrote a strongly-worded response to the <br>piece. Wilson defended the booklet in the <i>Daily News,</i> saying, among other <br>things, that the real issue was gay marriage. (He also reminde!
d the community <br>that he believed that homosexuals should be execut
ed or at least banished.) <br>Instead of facing their critics in proper academic exchange, Wilson, Jones, and <br>Atwood launched a full scale attack on them and the UI, even to the point of <br>asking the Governor to censure the administration and sanction the two history <br>professors who wrote the response to the slavery booklet.</font><span style="color: rgb(102, 0, 0);"><font size="4"><br></font></span></p><br><p class="MsoNormal"><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Regrettably, <br>the debate over the slavery booklet may have led to vandalism against NSA <br>property. Despite the fact that the culprits were not identified, the NSA dean <br>and faculty have continued to blame UI administrators, faculty, and students for <br>these unfortunate acts. </font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br> </p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font si!
ze="4">·</font></span><font size="4">In <br>response to a community petition drive with the title “Not in Our Town,” <br>directed against Wilson and his slavery booklet, Ben Merkle, Wilson’s son-in-law <br>and NSA instructor, set up a website named Hatesplotch (<a href="http://www.hatesplotch.net/" style="color: blue; text-decoration: underline;">www.hatesplotch.net</a>) <br>on which he and others have posted sarcastic and denigrating remarks about the <br>community response to his father-in-law’s views. Ben Merkle and others from NSA <br>also launched a rude attack on the UI Office of Diversity and its [former] head <br>officer, Raul Sanchez.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Since <br>1994 Wilson has sponsored an annual “history” conference held at the University <br>of Idaho. The 1994 conference was on slavery and the Wilson/Wilkins booklet was !
<br>one of the published results. UI faculty were unaware of this conf
erence until <br>last fall, and now many are quite worried about the impression that their <br>university is giving academic respectability to this event.</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Steve <br>Wilkins and George Grant are regular speakers at Wilson’s annual conferences. <br>Grant has a mail order doctorate and Wilkins is a conservative Calvinist <br>minister from Louisiana. Grant and Wilkins are promoting the novel <i>Heiland</i>, <br>whose hero leads a violent overthrow of a "godless" federal government. <i><br>Heiland </i>has been compared to the <i>Turner Diaries,</i> which inspired the <br>bombing of the Oklahoma Federal Building. <span lang="en-us">Wilkins wrote a <br>blurb on the backcover of book that reads: "<i>Heiland </i>takes us forward into <br>the future so that we might remember what we have lost from the past. It <br>is a most urgent!
tonic for our sick day."</span></font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">Wilkins <br>is a founding director of the League of the South, which has been declared a <br>hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center. The League has had close ties <br>with the 32,000-member Sons of Confederate Veterans, who in 2000 elected Kirk <br>Lyons to its national executive board. An outspoken racist, Lyons was married by <br>neo-Nazi Richard Butler in 1990, when Butler still had his compound in Hayden <br>Lake, Idaho. The League of the South and the Sons of Confederate Veterans <br>organize public protests with the Council of Conservative Citizens whose website <br>decries "negroes, queers and other retrograde species of humanity." One League <br>leader said that we “need a new type of Klan.” (These quotations are taken from<br><i>Intelligence</i> <i>Report </i>[Summer, 2000]).!
</font></p><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br><
span style="font-family: Symbol;"><font size="4">·</font></span><font size="4">When <br>journalists interviewed Wilson, Grant, and Wilkins in February, 2004, they each <br>disavowed any association with these organizations and their beliefs, even <br>though Wilson’s school proudly hangs Robert E. Lee's portrait in its classroom <br>and has displayed the Confederate flag on social occasions. One conservative <br>Christian minister wrote to the <i>Daily News</i> testifying that he saw the <br>Confederate flag prominently displayed in Wilson’s office. Wilson attended the <br>Fourth Southern Heritage Conference and has written four articles for the <br>neo-Confederate journal <i>Chronicles</i>, whose editors have boasted that they <br>are all members of the League of the South. The last article appeared together <br>with an ad announcing a conference in which Lincoln would be condemned and the <br>right of secession would be defended. Wilson also published an essay defendin!
g <br>the right of succession in his journal <i>Credenda/Agenda</i>. Finally, Wilson <br>is contributing editor for <i>The War Between the States: America's Uncivil War<br></i>(Bluebonnet Press, 2005), John J. Dwyer, general editor. Historian Ed <br>Sebesta claims that "this book seems to incorporate every 'Lost Cause' and <br>modern Neo-Confederate idea."</font></p><br><div align="left"><br> <pre style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 10pt; font-family: Courier New;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;" times="" new="" roman="" ;=""><span lang="en-us">In an article</span> in the <i>Spokesman Review</i> (Oct. 22<span lang="en-us">, 2006</span>)<span lang="en-us">, Wilson con</span>fessed that he was a "Paleo-Confederate," just after </span></pre><br></div><br><div align="left"><br> <pre style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 10pt; font-family: Courier New;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;" times="" new="" roman="" ;="">NSA President Roy Atwood said that any connection b!
etween NSA and the neo-Confederates was "laughably stupid." </sp
an></pre><br></div><br><div align="left"><br> <pre style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 10pt; font-family: Courier New;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;" times="" new="" roman="" ;="">The distinction Wilson tries to draw between neo- and paleo-confederate is one without a difference. Steve Wilkins, </span></pre><br></div><br><div align="left"><br> <pre style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 10pt; font-family: Courier New;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;" times="" new="" roman="" ;="">Founding Director of the neo-Confederate League of the South, has been keynote speaker at Wilson's Moscow </span></pre><br></div><br><div align="left"><br> <pre style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 10pt; font-family: Courier New;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;" times="" new="" roman="" ;="">conference<span lang="en-us">s</span> for 12 years in a row. Wilson<span lang="en-us"> also admitted</span> that Robert E. Lee's portrait and the Confederate flag have </span></pre><br></di!
v><br><div align="left"><br> <pre style="margin: 0in 0in 0.0001pt; font-size: 10pt; font-family: Courier New;"><span style="font-size: 14pt;" times="" new="" roman="" ;="">been displa<span lang="en-us">y</span>ed in church and school functions, in spite of Logos principal Tom Garfield's claims to the contrary. </span></pre><br></div><br><p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 12pt;"><br> </p><br><p class="MsoNormal"><font size="4">As I understand it, the principle of <br>academic collegiality is not just an in-house affair, but it should be practiced <br>with all colleagues and all academic institutions. Especially disturbing is <br>NSA’s decision to criticize the UI, upon which it is dependent for library and <br>lab science resources. This attack is especially ironic considering the fact <br>that so many NSA faculty have or are finishing UI degrees.<span lang="en-us"> <br>Nine of the 15 faculty have or expecting UI degrees.</span><br><br><br><br>I trust t!
hat you will agree that NSA’s response to this controversy is a very
<br>disturbing trend for this young college, one that started with so much promise <br>and support from the community. In the past I have spoken at NSA’s weekly <br>colloquium, and I spent upwards of sixty hours with one NSA student and his <br>senior thesis on Buddhism. I personally regret very much this loss of <br>collegiality and mutual respect. <br><br><br><br>If your policies require that I release this letter for wider validation, I will <br>certainly consider that option. But for now please consider these remarks <br>private and confidential. <br><br><br><br><br><br> Sincerely,<br><br><br><br> Nicholas F. Gier<br><br> Professor Emeritus<br><br> Department of Philosophy<br><br> University of Idaho</font></p><p class="MsoNormal"><br></p><p class="MsoNormal"><font size="4"><br></font></p></font></td></tr>
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<br><br><br><font color=#000000 style='font-size: 9pt;'>Juanita Flores
<br>Advocate for the Truth from Jesus</font><br/>
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