You are currently browsing the daily archive for May 16th, 2008.
Washington University in St. Louis conferred an honorary degree on anti-feminist activist Phyllis Schlafly today, as a significant portion of the university’s 2800 graduates turned their backs.
The move to honor Schlafly was met with protest and outrage from the start. WU chancellor Mark Wrighton apologized on Wednesday for the “the anguish this decision has caused,” but refused to reverse it.
A website created by opponents of the honor calls Schlafly “someone who has spent 40 years advocating for censorship of literature and art, railing against the teaching of evolution in schools, and thwarting equal rights for women, gays, and lesbians.”
Schlafly has described the protesters as “bitter,” “tacky,” and “a bunch of losers.”
Update: The St. Louis Post-Dispatch says about a third of the graduates turned their backs on Schlafly. A Feministing correspondent estimated that 75% did.
The trustees of California’s Cal State university system voted to raise student fees by 10% on Wednesday, and a committee of the state’s UC board of regents voted to raise that system’s tuition by 7.6%. Student trustees in both systems voted against the hike, and 16 protesters were arrested at the regents’ meeting.
California’s public colleges and universities don’t officially charge tuition, but the “fees” they do charge are comparable to other public universities’ tuition rates.
