From the NSP News Service: During a telephone conversation today with this reporter, Dr. Jacques Pluss, Commander, NSP, reflected on his years of service as a professor at The William Paterson University of New Jersey in Wayne, NJ. Dr. Pluss taught there (ancient/medieval history/history of religion/humanities honors program) from 1984-2000 (tenured 1988). When asked about the quality of students at that institution, he remarked that "by and large, with a few exceptions, the students were mediocre to poor." Pluss continued that his best students were in the Humanities Honors Program, where some were of the same caliber as those he encountered as an Instructor at The University of Chicago, now ranked fourth in the nation for general quality. William Paterson does not even make the list. As for his faculty colleagues, Pluss merely came back with the retort "by and large, politically ultra-correct and poorly trained."
When asked whether or not he ever encountered any Jewish students at William Paterson, he stated "yes, some. And I have to add that 'I NEVER KNEW THERE WAS SUCH A THING AS A REALLY STUPID JEW UNTIL I TAUGHT THERE'."
So much for that.
When asked about his three years of employment as a half-time adjunct professor at Fairleigh-Dickinson University (2002-2005), Pluss simply responded "the place was gross. Just gross. It was a mistake for me to ever have 'kept my hand in' by working there. And there, I found stupid negroes and stupid Jews. I was, in fact, going to cease my employment there when the news broke about my being a National Socialist, but I really didn't give a damn, since those idiots paid me right up until the end of what I'd already decided would be my last semester of work there. And I didn't even have to put in any classroom time for about two months, while being paid!.
It was nice to use the FDU offices to do what was, at the time, work for the Communications Office of the National Socialist Movement, a group which, parenthetically, I truly enjoyed being a part of until the debacle of the misfired 'Toledo rally' occurred and my views on the merits of the rally differed from those of some other rather influential (at the time; one is now jailed) members, bringing about my resignation from the NSM and a chain of unfortunate events. Still, there were some good men and women in that group then, and there probably are still some good ones there now'."
And so much for that, too.
-- Thomas Folz, Assistant Director of Communications, NSP. 1488!
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