November 21st, 2009
 

365 Gay: News

Protests against gay foe Ashcroft’s honorary degree


(Columbia, Missouri) A Missouri university’s decision to award an honorary degree to former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft is drawing protests from some students and faculty members.

Ashcroft will receive an honorary doctorate and deliver the commencement speech Saturday at Truman State University in the northeast Missouri town of Kirksville. As governor, he signed into law a measure upgrading the school from a regional teacher’s college into a selective, statewide liberal arts campus.

Nearly 300 opponents signed a petition “voicing discontent” with the decision by the Board of Governors of the school, which has close to 6,000 students according to its Web site. A silent protest is planned during Ashcroft’s speech.

Among the issues cited for the protest are Ashcroft’s opposition to gay marriage and his support of expanded interrogation techniques that critics equate with torture while leading the Justice Department after the Sept. 11 attacks.

“He has a history of supporting torture and institutionalized discrimination,” said graduating senior Sally Hertz, a sociology and anthropology major from Nevada, Iowa. “Honorary degrees are supposed to represent the values of our university. I don’t think these are things Truman stands for.”

Ashcroft, who turns 67 on Saturday, was attorney general during President George W. Bush’s first term before resigning for health reasons. He spent eight years as Missouri governor and six years as a U.S. senator. He opened a Washington lobbying firm in 2005.

A spokesman for The Ashcroft Group did not respond to an Associated Press request for comment.

School officials said they selected Ashcroft for the role he played in boosting the prestige of a school previously known as Northeast Missouri State.

“Ashcroft was chosen for the role he played in our university’s history,” said Heidi Templeton, a school spokeswoman. “We are a public university where all are encouraged to think freely and express their opinion.”

History professor Thomas Zoumaras objects to what he calls Ashcroft’s violation of international law covering acceptable interrogation techniques. He also disputed the former governor’s role in transforming Truman State, saying that the school’s former president Charles McClain, who will also receive an honorary degree on Saturday, deserves more of the credit for the school’s elevated stature.

Zoumaras and Hertz said they don’t want opponents to disrupt the graduation ceremony. Among the tactics endorsed for protesters are not clapping, turning their backs while Ashcroft speaks and holding up copies of the half-page protest ad from the school newspaper.

Former Missouri Gov. Mel Carnahan, who died in a plane crash while campaigning against Ashcroft in the 2000 Senate race, also will receive an honorary degree Saturday. Carnahan posthumously defeated Ashcroft, with the challenger’s widow, Jean, taking the seat until a special election two years later.


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  • Jennifer L Said: May 8th, 2009 at 4:55 pm
    • This is the first college I ever attended, way back in 1985 when it was still called Northeast Missouri State University (they changed the name around 1987 or so). I wish I could say I’m surprised that they’d choose to give a degree like this to this bigot, but the little town was a hotbed of conservative thinking and bigotry then, and I doubt much has changed in the intervening 24 years.

  • Billy Said: May 8th, 2009 at 1:10 pm
    • Who need’s a bigit to be honored

  • Peter-Nicholas Said: May 8th, 2009 at 10:14 am
    • Yes, just who need to honor, an evangelical fascist! NOT!

 
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