Wednesday, 28 February 2007

"Professor" Reggie von Zurbach

This morning, while examining the latest lists of mad petitions, I found "Limit postal/proxy votes to valid absence", which I thought about blogging on. Then I noticed that the submitter, Prof Reggie von Zugbach, had a rather nutty name which I thought I remembered seeing before. So I Googled.

The first two hits are PM petitions (the proxy votes one I mention above and one asking the PM to "Ignore Third World Hype" on the grounds that no one in the UK cares).

The third link takes us to a post about a petition about a possible cancer treatment at the very wonderful Quackometer site which comments on quacky news stories.

Then we get a page in Hansard (effectively the minutes from the Houses of Parliament) where an MP talked, in 1996, about a stalking case involving Mrs von Zugbach. The MP tells us that Prof von Zugbach "is an author, a former Army major and a lecturer in management studies at Paisley university".

By this point my "just how real is this" detector was pinging madly. Somehow these don't seem like the normal sort of Google hits a professor in this day and age might expect. So I tested with the names - common and unusual - of assorted Professors of my acquaintance. (Go is a marvellous hobby. You meet the most eccentric academics.) And, indeed, the first hits tend to be their professional websites, then perhaps their Go rating, then references to alarming academic papers.

So I went to the University of Paisley website. Where no amount of searching results in Prof vonZugbach's name. A Google search on the Paisley domain gave me two PDFs about research at Paisley in 1999-2000 (where von Zugbach is listed, without titles or qualifications, in a list that may be that of academic staff in the Business School, but doesn't actually say what it's a list of, and also cited as a co-author on various academic papers published in, variously, "Department of Management & Marketing Working Papers Vol 2", "Frank Cass", "STUC Research Conference" and "Defense Analysis") and in 2000-2001 (where von Zugbach is definitely not listed as a member of staff of the Business School, but is cited as a co-author on a paper published in "Defense Analysis"). A re-examination of the University of Paisley Business School shows that von Zugbach is certainly not there now.

Sliding further down the page of Google results we finally find what look like some academic credentials: Professor von Zugbach is a Senior Faculty Member at Knightsbridge University. That's, erm - Knightsbridge University, the "free, autonomous and self-validating organisation". Where he is a "Senior Academic Advisor & Visiting Professor".

Call me an intellectual snob and you'll be right. But this is not the calibre of Professor I am inclined to take seriously at the best of times; his insistence on using the title Professor when signing petitions completely unrelated to his field of study leave me singularly unimpressed.

OK, it's not quite as bad as definitely-not-Dr Gillian McKeith, but it's dubious at best. A singularly inappropriate devaluation of the title "Professor".

And a complete and utter crackpot, to judge by the petitions he's created (the one about proxy votes mentioned above, a request for an English/Welsh language test before permitting UK voting (go, go the Jim Crow laws - probably this would be illegal under EU legislation anyway, wouldn't it?) and a request that it be permitted to ban "sectarian (eg head scarves) clothing in the work place", possibly among others) and several of the ones he's signed (most of the ones I've looked at seem to be of the Isolationist type - stopping people from voting unless they're Pure, sort of thing).

On the plus side, while all of this has left a nasty taste in my mouth, I have discovered the Quackometer. That may make it all worthwhile.

44 comments:

Le Canard Noir said...

And now I have discovered you Jenny! What a happy world.

Le Canard Noir of the Quackometer

Anonymous said...

I was taught by Prof Reggie von Zugbach before he was a Prof when he was a Lecturer at Glasgow University. He was one of the only lecturers to lecture in his gown and he always wore a bespoke pinstripe suit with a carnation.

His full name at that time was Reggie von Zugback de Sugg.

He was an entertaining lecturer and left to become a Professor at Paisley College (later Paisley University). When we asked "Paisley?" he said "a chair is a chair". I think he loved titles. As to why he left Paisley I don't know.

Anonymous said...

I hope this does not give real loonies ideas, but it might be a warning to readers. While ill, I discovered E-petitions and in enforced idelness, I signed quite a lot (and started some myself). I signed in what I thought was the correct way for such things - mistake. I then started to get replies to emails I had never sent. While I was in hospital and away from a computer, some kind soul seems also to have signed least one petition that I would never have even looked at. My own fault! I was warned. Some time ago a "computer expert" delared "cyber war". Last time it was abusive emails in my name. I now have a random password, regularly changed. My petition signing days are over. At least I have found this site.

Anonymous said...

Likewise I had the pleasure of attending Reggie von Zugbach's class while at Glasgow. He was by far the most entertaining lecturer at the school and was not in any sense a quack or a crank. Superb gentleman and incredibly intelligent. I didn't get where I am today without kwowing a real Reggie when I see one.

Ian Gorman
ian_gorman@co.harris.tx.us

Anonymous said...

I had the pleasure of attending Reggie Von Zugbachs management lectures at Paisley, and I can honestly say that he was the best lecturer I ever had. He was entertaining, made the subject(s) relevant and above all always came over as a thoroughly decent bloke. I was actually reading my copy of his book "The Winning Manager" today, still one of my favourite books on management/organisational theory. Reggie, you are the stuff of legend!.....and you are the only lecturer I ever knew to tell it like it is!!!

joannacatherine said...

I was taught by Prof Reggie von Zugbach at Paisley, Thoroughly enjoyed his lectures. His teaching in business strategy has given me an essential grounding in the work I do now i.e. mergers and acquisitions.

Anonymous said...

I worked with Reggie when he was at Paisley - cool guy! His jack russell terrier caused terror in the corridors - "Madge", was she called? Anyone remember "Wee Touch of Tartan Day!? Lol!!

Anonymous said...

The breadth of Reggie von Zugbach's expertise is considerable and, while certainly colourful, he is no charlatan - instead he is a charming and highly accomplished gentleman.

Whether at Glasgow, Paisley or Knightsbridge (where he cast his exacting eye over my own poor offerings), I think any student of Reggie's will be someone worth their salt. Academia needs more like him.

Anonymous said...

I was at Glasgow University when Prof Reggie von Zugback de Sugg lectured me three lectures as a "management" part of the Economics degree. I am now an academic on the Faculty at Oxford.

He was a great lectuere and a genuine academic. I still remember:

Q "What is the objective of a firm?"
A "To get the goddam product out the door!"

Q "What is the main obstacle preventing this?"
(Divinity students-look away)
A "People bloody people!"

Great fun. But also I learned a lot. Perhaps the most memorable lectures ever-and I have been lectured by Nobel prizewinners.

Anonymous said...

Like a few others, I was fortunate to be lectured by Reggie whilst studying at Glasgow University during the late eighties. He was by far the most engaging lecturer I encountered during my studies with an unrivalled ability to command the attention and respect of his students.

Anonymous said...

The Prof taught me when I was doing a BA Hons degree at Paisley Uni and was by far the most intelligent and entertaining lecturer we had. Eccentric? Possibly, but there are few that can carry off the eccentricity with style and good faith. One of the most memorable recollection I have of my time as Paisley Uni.

Anonymous said...

Reggie was a hoot, fond memories of of having him has my dissertation supervisor at Paisley Uni. Whether it was playing his banjo while you were up at his office, playing with his dog Madge or round having a few beers in the local pubs, he was an all round entertainer. I loved it when he wore his robes to lecture, pin stripe suit and daily carnations, made him stand out from the crowd.

Anonymous said...

I had the great pleasure of being lectured by Professor Von Zugbach whilst at the University of Paisley 1992-1996. He is in fact the only lecturer of substance that I remember and I frequently quote, "management is about getting the god damn product out the door." Thank you Reggie - you are one of a few at Paisley who had a big impact on me! This man is definitely no quack - he may be delightfully eccentric but there's nothing wrong with that.

Anonymous said...

I feel the tone of this post totally overwhelming...clearly someone that does not know the legend that is Reggie. As a new course the BABAM students were pretty raw, but it was Reggie and no little part Ali Gali, that made lasting impressions on people who are no in leading companies, Officers in HM Forces, and even the odd entrepreneur...
Whether we own a business in Largs, Command a squad of elite soldiers, advise government on infrastructure or manage a call centre, most of us will always remember our time in the large converted church lecture hall on George St Paisley...Yes the suit, carnation, Jack Russell than invariably "ruined" RvZdS overheads, "mess dress" outfit and Scottish Dancing at Management Society events or just grabbing a pint in the Bowlers Arm Reggie was the one that has the answer, usually one we didn't like!!!
Not taking anything away from Ali Gali, Paddy M or dare I say even Frau Lees, but Reggie is the one we still all talk about...
as a ps does anyone know what happened to Matthew Rowntree???

Anonymous said...

Like so many others I was lectured in Management by Reggie; he made his sense of business values clear when he admonished me: "The role of the company is to create customers; the role of customers is to get the God-damned product out the door". Sound advice which has served me well. He was a very hard working lecturer, you know, the kind who actually got off their arses and marked their students' essay promptly. I remember him on a late night talk show winding Kirsty Wark up by declaring corporate creches as a theft on the shareholders! It was choice stuff. A great lecturer, solid thinker and warm and generous man. Long may his eccentricity reign!

steven william kelly said...

hi i am steven william kelly of berlin

sorry, but the name of this very nice guy with a wonderfuf woman is:

Prof. Regonald Gordon Leslie von Zugbach de Sugg

!!!

Mo Hasan said...

Reggi a racist.? You are joking! I met him first in the department office and I heard an Urdu conversation and saw only one other Asian face. The other Urdu speaker was Reggi. I knew about him as my cos was allod to stay at uni because he had written praise on her essay in Urdu and her mum gave up trying to stop her studying. Just hear his iimpression in Urdu in lectures of a sherrif arresting a bad ar*e. LOL I asked a pal from our Friday school about Reggis Arabic. He said Reggi spoke like a Syrian who had lived in Egypt. The poster should do some homework on Google. Reggi did a lot of publihing with Mohammed Isaq about Asians in the Army and was picked up by the government to help. All the Asian students thought he was a great guy and he was always there for you.

Mo Hasan

Anonymous said...

Reggie, come back to Bicester H3 for our 2000th. We miss you.
OnOn
Amnesia

One NGO's Day at a Time! said...

I served under the command of Major R Von Suggbach-de-Sugg in the 70's in Gernany. Truly a diamond geezer who always had a solid answer and advice in any situation. Very pleased to read so many positive contributions about him.

Anonymous said...

I took served with Major RGL Von Zugbach de Sugg, not only served with him but we became close friends as we represented the unit at Fencing, and he 'used' his titled contacts to get us around germany fecning against top players.
One of the very good guys, susanna too, had many an afternoon tea in his garedn in Bracht (Germany)

Anonymous said...

He was no quack. He was a bona fide lecturer at Glasgow University. He was a really conscientious tutor too - he spent time reading everyone's essays and writing helpful advice and comments at the bottom that showed he had really read what you'd written. A very likeable and genuine person.

Anonymous said...

I knew dear Reggie in the days when his name was Reggie Baker de Sugg (previously just Baker?) He always was plausible and did have the gift of the gab. So now he is Reggie Baker de Sugg alias Reggie Baker von Zugbach de Sugg alias Professor Reggie von Zugbach. Confusing?

Anonymous said...

See also ---
http://company-director-check.co.uk/director/900354090

Anonymous said...

also----http://bizzy.co.uk/uk/director/1900354090/reginald-gordon-leslie-von-zugbach-de-sugg

Anonymous said...

exposee--

From: "Lee"
Subject: Re: [NTT] NON-GEN When did women take on their Husbands name
Date: Sat, 26 Feb 2000 23:08:41 -0000


Saturday, February 26, 2000 3:42 AM
Subject: Re: [NTT] NON-GEN When did women take on their Husbands name
Rod Neep wrote

> Actually there are examples of the male taking on the female's family
> name too! Usually those examples relate to important families with lands
> and money... it goes like this....>

When I worked in the M.O.D as a civvy we had a Major in our branch with the
rather fetching surname of Von Zugbach de Sugg which was his german wifes
surname and he had changed his , something to do with titles or inheritance
so the story went. His surname was originally Baker, I wonder if future
researchers will hit a wall there?

Lee in Hornsea

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Anonymous said...

mist to the grill ---

http://www.verwandt.de/karten/absolut/zugbach+de+sugg.html

Anonymous said...

mist to the grill 2----

http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-41119588.html

Anonymous said...

mist to the grill 3 --contact

http://www.klicktel.de/person/reginald-prof-dr-herr-zugbach-de-sugg-von-duesseldorf-QJLGLSSLQBAFE0D.html

Anonymous said...

the thick plottens----
http://conservativecompassion.wordpress.com/2012/12/17/tory-arms-corruption/

Anonymous said...

quote from the obne link----

D) Demand of Tony Blair that he release from the restrictions of the Official Secrets Act one Dr. Reginald von Zugbach de Sugg, allegedly Simmonds’ erstwhile intelligence partner, a former officer in British Military Intelligence, and a member of the faculty of the Department of Management Studies at the University of Paisley. Zugbach knows all of the circumstances of Simmonds’ illicit activities on behalf of Margaret Thatcher, and the then Conservative Government.

Dead Men Don’t Eat Lunch alleges that both Simmonds and Kelly died because they knew too much about the arms corruption, originally set in place by the Conservatives, and then perpetuated by Tony Blair and New Labour. Much is known of the circumstances of Kelly’s unfortunate family. Less is known about Simmonds’ family.

Anonymous said...

...... and....

[PDF] FOIA Logs for Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for 1999-2004
pubs.mantisintel.com/FOIA_Logs_CIA_1999-2004.pdf
Dateiformat: PDF/Adobe Acrobat
INTERNATIONAL DRUG TRADE AND TRAFFICING IN LATIN AMERICA. March 26, 2003. F-2003- ...... F-2001-00744 REGINALD STEPHEN GARFIELD TODD. Apr 32001 ...... F-1999-01593 REGINAL VON ZUGBACH DE SUGG. 21-Jul-99 ...

Anonymous said...

The above biographical extract from the NTT Non-Gen discussion board is incorrect. It was originally posted, in good faith, as part of an informal discussion but was based upon rumor and the facts were not checked. When the errors were discovered, an apology was given  and attempts were made  it  to delete the post. Unfortunately it had landed on a website where it is permanently fixed. The erroneous facts, which  contain potentially libelous comment,  are very much regretted. Rod.

Anonymous said...

I really do not think the Glasgow University Media department is where the answers are going to be found. Great university for hard science, art, history, medicine and veterinary studies, but media and economics I can think of better places, their management school did have some stars like Reggie Von Zugbach de Zug before he moved to Paisley.

Anonymous said...

I knew this person a long time ago. He even then did seem to be the original Bogus B.
The words 'Rubber Gloves' and 'Barge Pole' come to mind.

Unknown said...

I was in the Army (RAOC) with Reggie! He kept a fridge full of carnations and always wore one in his button hole! He started life as Reggie Baker, then became Reggie Baker de Sugg, before meeting Bettina Von Zugbach and changing finally to Reggie Von Zugbach de Sugg. He claimed the scar on his cheek was from duelling, but I really have no idea as to the efficacy of that remark. He flirted with death regularly by approaching just about every woman in the Officers Mess and asking if he could f**k them? Very few told their husbands on the basis that he was actually harmless and their husbands might have had a sense of humour failure!

Anonymous said...

From the comments above, it will be seen that many of us feel we have reason to be grateful to Professor Reggie von Zugbach and remember him with respect and affection. But who is this dreadful Jenny troll, who is so fired up with her own self righteousness, self importance and obvious malice that she cannot be bothered to do even the minimum of Google research that would have put her straight on Reggie's academic background and qualifications? Can anyone shed light on why she might be such an appalling person?
JA

Anonymous said...

Can't help but chip in to this thread. Reggie was my lecturer in my Honours year at Paisley - 1997. My course was Business and Management and Reggie lectured 'Strategic Management' I believe. As well as the fresh carnation, Madge the dog and (obviously from this thread) '...get the God damn product out the door...' very memorable one-liner, I won't ever forget his tipple - 'a pint of Belhaven Best my boy'. I don't imagine he ever bought a drink for himself, such was his popularity amongst students. I remember the day I graduated he stopped for a pint with me and a few of my friends. His parting words were 'well former Gradu-unds(?) I've done my part - time for you to show the world what great Graduates you have become'. Those were the last words I heard from Reggie and indeed the last time I saw him. I'd like to think I haven't let him down.... :)

Anonymous said...

I was on an OU course (1st year, Foundation week(?)) when I found myself sitting on a bench of 4 seats next to Major von Sugbach de Sugg, along with a Police Officer and a tax inspector, at some introductory gathering. I was a Customs officer at the time; Reg thought that 4 public servants having randomly seated themselves next to each other was a clear sign from the heavens, so we spent the rest of the week's free time imbibing inappropriate quantities of alcohol and singing "Lloyd George knew my father, he knew my mother too" outside the ladies' accommodation block late into the night. Well, not the tax inspector - he decided we were clearly a disgrace to Her Majesty's service and refused to associate further with us.

The author of this blog needs to do a little more (sarcasm alert) due diligence before trashing people she's never met/doesn't know. Don't suppose that will happen though!

Anonymous said...

JR should have done some proper research but she is too lazy and too wrapped up in herself to be arsed. She was like that all the time at Durham. We put it down to the fact that she was trying to compensate for being fat, ugly and having FA personality.

Scott said...

I had the pleasure of having Reggie as a lecturer in the early 90's at Glasgow Uni. His lectures were an island of hope in an otherwise dull and boring Accountancy degree. I especially loved his idea of Jack Russell Terrier syndrome - being someone whose approach to life was, "can I shag it? can I kill it? can I eat it?"

Unknown said...

I knew Reggie very well. We commuted from Bicester, where we both lived in the Army Garrison of Central Ordnance Depot Bicester. I was a captain working for the MOD at the Directorate of Supply Computer Services on Graven Hill. I was attending a 3 month course in the School of Ordnance in Blackdown Barracks, Deepcut, Surrey. I lived in the officers mess in Deepcut all week and went back to Bicester at the weekends. Reggie was a major in the RAOC and his family lived in Bicester. Reggie was working as an instructor at the School of Ordnance. We used to do alternate car sharing journeys between Bicester and Deepcut. Reggie was always very eccentric, I had also met him previously in Germany. I had an Austin Allegro and he had a Citroen 2CV which matched his eccentric style.
He was always very proper and sociable. Although he seemed to be a strange character, he was genuine and always wore the floral buttonhole when he dressed in a civilian suit. I haven't seen him for years but I hope he is well. The world needs more characters.

Lorna Janette Baker said...

What a gentleman! Professor Reggie von Zurbach was indeed a knosedgeable tutor and a gifted tutor and lecturer. I attended is classeses in Management in the University of Paisley in 1996.

Anonymous said...

If you believe anything dear Reggie said then you would believe anything. A very plausible
utter fraud.

Unknown said...

I went to school (Roke Secondary Modern) with Reggie Baker. De Sugg was apparently his maternal grandfather's surname. Definitely a character, "conservative" would be understating. Lost contact with him after he joined the army (and I joined Warners Holiday camps as an entertainments organiser.