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Gonzales To Make $100,000 At Texas Tech
By Andrew Ramonas | July 10, 2009 12:02 pm

Former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales will make $100,000 for his one-year job as a professor and administrator at Texas Tech University, the college’s student newspaper reported today.

Alberto Gonzales (DOJ)

Alberto Gonzales (DOJ)

We reported Tuesday that the controversial Bush official will teach an undergraduate course called “Contemporary Issues in the Executive Branch” and will help recruit minority students for the college. One unnamed professor told The Daily Toreador that Gonzales was not worth the money.

“I think it’s preposterous for him to come here,” the faculty member told the paper. “They’re trumping up some fake position to bring him in, and I don’t know what his responsibility will be, but I’m certain it won’t be commensurate with his pay. If you look at his teaching load, it’s incredibly reduced.”

Students also aren’t happy with their new professor. They have expressed themselves through Facebook groups including “Alberto Gonzales Doesn’t Belong At Texas Tech” and “Texas Tech Students and Alumni Against Employing Alberto Gonzales.” The Toreador said in a staff editorial that the controversy surrounding the former Bush official far exceeds Texas Tech’s employment of hotheaded coach Bobby Knight, who infamously threw a chair across a basketball court.

“He was involved in so many scandals,” senior Reagan Tatsch told the paper . “One of Texas Tech’s mottos is strive for honor. That kind of goes against it by hiring him.”

Top university officials lauded Gonzales in a statement this week. Texas Tech chancellor Kent Hance said the former Attorney General will “prepare our students for success.”

Gonzales told The Blog of Legal Times in an interview yesterday that he is excited about his new job — his first one since he resigned as Attorney General almost three years ago. He added that he expects to fit in at the conservative college town. Read the full post here.

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  1. [...] for him to come here,” an unnamed professor told The Daily Toreador, the student paper (as reported by Main Justice, an online magazine that follows the Justice Department). “They’re trumping up some fake [...]

MARRYING INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT LAW AND THE FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT.

Shanghai-based Lesli Ligorner, a partner with Paul Hastings LLP, speaks with Main Justice Editor-in-Chief Mary Jacoby about the overlap between employment law and FCPA compliance in China.

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