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View Full Version : NU Withdraws Wright Honor, Jerry Springer To Address Law Grads (Chicago Tribune)



ckaihatsu
6th May 2008, 12:21
'The Onion can't write this good' -- or -- 'Why I left my alma mater after I graduated'

NU Withdraws Wright Honor, Jerry Springer To Address Law Grads (Chicago Tribune)


(Quick note: I am hereby invoking creative license for using poor grammar in my headline above -- stylistically I can't beat it -- I tried.)

Holy shit -- I just saw this posted at Chicago Indymedia, and I nearly died laughing -- if anyone ever needed any indication of where national politics are at right now, this is it!!! The profoundly bourgeois institution of Northwestern University -- also my alma mater -- would rather feature *the* sensationalistic circus ringmaster for our times than side with the esteemed gentleman who should rightly be the populist presidential candidate in the upcoming national election.

This decision by the president of NU shows exactly, to the inch, of just how wide the chasm is between the location of the nation and the rest of us. This almost-ivy-league institution of higher learning would rather stoop to host a personality who degrades poor whites than rise to the level of one who upholds people of color. Incredible.


Chris




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http://chicago.indymedia.org/newswire/display/82324/index.php

NU Withdraws Wright Honor, Jerry Springer To Address Law Grads

Author

* Jodi S. Cohen | Tribune staff reporter

Date Created

* 01 May 2008

Date Edited

* 02 May 2008

"I believe that there is a systematic effort to discredit Dr. Wright and now a major educational institution is caving into that," said Rev. Linda Thomas, a professor at the Lutheran School of Theology. NU Law School graduates will listen to Jerry Springer. Apparently the controversy surrounding the TV personality's appearance is not deemed disruptive. Only Wright's appearance would be disruptive.
_____________________________________________
Northwestern University President Henry Bienen has rescinded the university's offer to bestow an honorary doctorate of sacred theology on Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., whose fiery comments on race and America have caused trouble for Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama.

In a letter to Wright, the senator's longtime pastor, Bienen wrote in March that he decided to withdraw the degree because the controversy about Wright could disrupt graduation ceremonies.

"In light of the controversy surrounding statements made by you that have recently been publicized, the celebratory character of Northwestern's commencement would be affected by our conferring of this honorary degree," Bienen wrote.

It appears to be the first time Northwestern has rescinded an honorary degree offer, though the school keeps no such records, spokesman Alan Cubbage said. Withdrawing such an offer would be rare for any university. Wright was not scheduled to speak at the June ceremony, and Cubbage declined to name the other intended honorary degree recipients.

This week, Wright was quoted in a Texas newspaper as saying the offer was rescinded because Bienen told him he "wasn't patriotic enough." Northwestern denied that portrayal in a statement Thursday, saying Bienen "never characterized Dr. Wright's views or made a judgment about them."

Wright has eight honorary degrees from other colleges and universities, according to Trinity's Web site. He received an honorary degree from Colgate University in 1998 and one from Valparaiso University in 2002, university officials said.

The Valparaiso commencement program cited Wright's accomplishments in expanding Trinity's membership and his church's work on behalf of senior citizens and of low-income and unemployed families needing child care.

Wright has bachelor's and master's degrees from Howard University, another master's degree from the University of Chicago Divinity School and a doctorate from United Theological Seminary.

"I believe that there is a systematic effort to discredit Dr. Wright and now a major educational institution is caving into that," said Rev. Linda Thomas, a professor at the Lutheran School of Theology and a member of Wright's congregation at Trinity United Church of Christ on Chicago's South Side. "It is irresponsible."

According to Northwestern policy, any person can nominate someone for an honorary degree and a faculty committee vets the suggestions. The degrees go to people who have distinguished themselves in their fields or who have served the community, and there should be care that the degree "not be politically motivated or appear to be so," according to the university's Web site.

Northwestern has conferred hundreds of honorary degrees during the last half-century. Obama received one in 2006, when he was the commencement speaker. Other recipients include actors Robert Redford and Bill Cosby, and U.S. Sen. John McCain, also a candidate for president.

Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright was scheduled to address graduates and receive an honorary doctor of laws degree in 1999 but canceled a few days before because she was stuck in Europe. Protesters had planned to demonstrate against Albright's appearance, but university officials said at the time that her cancellation was unrelated to the protests.

Controversial talk show host Jerry Springer, who is scheduled to address students graduating from the law school, is not slated to get an honorary degree.

The controversy surrounding Wright erupted about six weeks ago when media began airing parts of his sermons. Obama distanced himself from Wright's rhetoric but did not disavow the clergyman until Tuesday, when he called Wright's latest comments "outrageous" and "appalling."

At an appearance Monday at the National Press Club, Wright asserted that the U.S. government created the AIDS epidemic to wipe out racial minorities and praised Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan as one of the most important voices of the current century.

Northwestern senior Jonathan Webber, who expects to graduate in June, said he supports Northwestern's decision to rescind the honorary degree.

"Him being there would have shifted the focus away from the celebration of graduation of Northwestern seniors to the controversy and the chaos that surrounds him," Webber said. "That is not the point of graduation. It is better to keep the focus on what it should be and not even let politics into the graduation scene."

jscohen (at) tribune.com