Students and faculty ask why academic integrity rules don’t apply at the top

WHEN TALKING ABOUT FRAUD in New Jersey, the trail of cynicism goes all the way to the top.

For example, in a trailer for the recently released documentary “The Soprano State,” the governor himself acknowledges, “When people talk about New Jersey, they bring up one of two things: Political corruption or ‘The Sopranos.'”

Still, on the campus of Kean University, allegations that the university president, Dawood Farahi, has violated the academic integrity rules of the university are upsetting everyone-students and faculty-execept those who would be held accountable, i.e., the administration and the board of trustees. Farahi is alleged to have lied repeatedly on his resumes, going as far back as 1983.

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