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Jetsetlemming
01-12-2007, 11:26 PM
SMU Faculty Oppose Bush library
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070112/ap_on_re_us/bush_library_2

DALLAS - Negotiations to build George W. Bush's presidential library at Southern Methodist University have divided the campus, pitting the administration and some alumni against members of the liberal-leaning faculty who say the project would be an embarrassment to the school.

Some professors have complained that the combined library, museum and think tank would celebrate a presidency that unnecessarily took the country into a war.

The fear is that the library "will continue to espouse the philosophy and practice of the Bush administration, which has seriously divided our nation and has brought the ire of other countries," said William McElvaney, a retired professor at SMU's theology school and co-author a November opinion piece in the campus newspaper titled "The George W. Bush Library: Asset or Albatross?"

SMU emerged as the front-runner in the competition last month when the library site selection committee said it was entering further discussions with the 11,000-student, private university in one of Dallas's wealthiest neighborhoods. The project will be financed with a private fund drive aimed at raising at least $200 million.

Bush connections to SMU run deep. First lady
Laura Bush is a graduate and is on the board of trustees. Vice President
Dick Cheney previously served on the board. Presidential adviser Karen Hughes and former White House counsel Harriet Miers are both graduates.

SMU officials said the project is unlikely to be derailed by the faculty opposition, and said the professors opposed to it are in the minority.

Brad Cheves, vice president for external affairs and development, said the library could help recruit students, attract visitors and increase giving. "It raises the profile of SMU no matter how people feel about
President Bush," he said.

White House spokeswoman Dana Perino declined to comment. And a spokesman for former Bush administration Commerce Secretary Don Evans, chairman of the library search committee, would not comment on whether the objections from some of the 600 faculty members would affect the panel's final decision, expected in a few months.

As for the students, Luis Arango, a 21-year-old junior and political science major, said on campus Friday: "This school has a very conservative vibe, and most of the students like Bush. The only people who don't seem to be the faculty. I know for a fact that some are real liberal and I don't think should be teaching here."

As for the alumni, many of them are wealthy and conservative. And Mike Boone, who is on SMU's board of trustees and earned undergraduate and law school degrees from SMU, said an overwhelming majority of alumni support the Bush library project.

"It's prestigious and brings a lot of value to a university," said Boone, a Dallas lawyer who has known Bush since he was Texas governor.

The other finalists are Baylor University in Waco, near the Bushes' Crawford ranch, and the University of Dallas.

McElvaney warned that not only could the library hurt SMU's reputation, it could also become a target for terrorists or others who want to strike back at Bush, McElvaney said.

"Dallas is already known as the city in which President Kennedy was assassinated, so does Dallas want a Bush library that could become a prime terrorist target?" McElvaney asked.

The library of the president's father is on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station.

Universities often compete to host presidential libraries. But this is not the first time that the political passions of the day have stirred resistance to such a project.

In 1981, Duke University faculty members, by one vote, voted against continuing discussions to build
Richard Nixon's library there. Nixon graduated from Duke Law School in North Carolina. Duke's trustees voted to build the library anyway, but negotiations with Nixon officials eventually broke down. The Nixon library was eventually built in Yorba Linda, in his native California.

"It was obvious this was going to be a memorial to glorify the career of Richard Nixon rather than be a repository of his papers," said Lawrence Evans, a retired Duke physics professor.

Native Texan Lyndon B. Johnson's library was built on the University of Texas campus in Austin during the Vietnam area. During the 1971 opening ceremony, hundreds of protesters chanted anti-war slogans and released black balloons. Demonstrators also marched around campus, throwing bottles, cans and rocks at police, and dozens were arrested.

Shamu
01-12-2007, 11:41 PM
I'm opposed to them building the Bush library on SMU, ONLY because where they want to build it would seriously hinder my commute to work (with all the construction, etc...). Otherwise, I don't really care where they build it.
As for SMU, it's full of trust fund babies that of course want the library on campus. Dallas tends to be pro Bush in general anyways, since this is kinda his "hometown" (The Ranch is about an hour south of here) =/

Jetsetlemming
01-13-2007, 12:06 AM
I just thought it was funny that the only opposition to this was the professors; the students, administrators, allumni, and just about everyone else is fine with it. :P

Plekto
01-13-2007, 12:13 AM
They need to put it someplace else, IMO. It's going to get trashed or burnt or sometihng if its in such a high-visibility location with so many sutdents around(as opposed, to say, the Regan Library, which is out in the middle o nowhere and easy to keep safe)

Shamu
01-13-2007, 12:16 AM
Meh, if they put it there, it will block off or make one of the busiest intersections even worse.
I liked how the student they quoted said in regards to the faculty, "I know for a fact that some are real liberal and I don't think should be teaching here."
A good chunk of the kids that go there have more money than any of us will ever see in our entire life times. It's insane.

EDIT: Pletko, it won't get trashed. It's going to be in a VERY VERY posh part of town. One that the police patrol heavily.

Hiigarasjet
01-13-2007, 12:47 AM
why make a library named after a man who cant read or write english properly..

Mechs
01-13-2007, 01:53 AM
why make a library named after a man who cant read or write english properly..

Wow, how low can you go.

Anyway, this shouldn't even be a issue. Everybody is for it, except the teachers. Majority rule, so the teachers should just accept it.

Lisa M
01-13-2007, 02:23 AM
I'm a firm believer in not building memorials for people who aren't dead, which is why I'm opposed to it.

Fermented Yeast Paste
01-13-2007, 02:32 AM
A couple of you are forgetting what exactly a presidential library is-- it's just a library designated as a place of historical materials of any X president. They've been doing this for every president since Coolidge; SMU was just the location chosen for the one that will be for George W. Bush.

I don't like GWB at all but there's really no reason to not have this thing built.

Jetsetlemming
01-13-2007, 02:48 AM
^yep.
Though Shamu makes a good point, one that's not mentioned: It's location just might be a pain in the ass to roads or highways. *shrug* They really should avoid building over major highways for a library. >_>

Chris
01-13-2007, 03:07 AM
The guy's reasoning on the terrorist attack seems to be a bit off. There are many other high profile targets that a terrorist cell could attack.

Shamu
01-13-2007, 03:15 AM
Like I said before, I don't care that they are building it, only where. I oppose it because I, as well as many of my neighbors, will be directly effected while it is being built. If you've ever tried to find alternative routes in Dallas, you know what a pain in the ass it is
I think a lot of the residents will have something to say when one of the main on ramps to one of the main expressways is blocked off or partly blocked when they start construction.
I'd personally like to see them build it in Wacko..er...Waco...>_> or even farther into the SMU campus.

Jetsetlemming
01-13-2007, 03:18 AM
They should make it a flying library. :3 with rockets on the bottom! And death lasers! :D

Shamu
01-13-2007, 03:21 AM
Now there's an idea!
He gets his library and the rest of us don't have to deal with construction! \o/
Except, this is Texas...I know someone would get a little trigger happy with that death laser >_>

Hiigarasjet
01-13-2007, 04:54 AM
trigger happy death laser weilding texans...

Mechs
01-13-2007, 06:00 AM
They should make it a flying library. :3 with rockets on the bottom! And death lasers! :D

"The George W. Bush flying fortress/library".......I have got to think of a better name :watson:.

Josh
01-13-2007, 07:02 AM
The "George 'Dubya' Bush Fortress of Solilitudianinessalismtegery." Pronounced: Solehlee toodian iness alism teegeree."

I really don't care either way. Build it, don't build it, its just another library for a president that very few people will ever go to.

Jetsetlemming
01-13-2007, 07:13 AM
"The George W. Bush flying fortress/library".......I have got to think of a better name :watson:.
Death Star!!!

Plekto
01-13-2007, 05:27 PM
So I can see it now...

The early years - (lots of nothing since he was a pampered lazy bum)
The drug years
The recovery years
The year he found "Jeebus"
The corporate years where he did nothing but lose money

Heh.

He has perhaps one of the least remarkeable and useless lives of any President that I can imagine. It's going to be a horrible place. Somehow, it's fitting, considering that he's right on track to be known as the worst U.S. Persident in our history(even 200 years from now, he'll still be the worst I bet)

RandomPasserby
01-13-2007, 06:32 PM
So I can see it now...

The early years - (lots of nothing since he was a pampered lazy bum)
The drug years
The recovery years
The year he found "Jeebus"
The corporate years where he did nothing but lose money

Heh.

He has perhaps one of the least remarkeable and useless lives of any President that I can imagine. It's going to be a horrible place. Somehow, it's fitting, considering that he's right on track to be known as the worst U.S. Persident in our history(even 200 years from now, he'll still be the worst I bet)
Are you saying that all other presidents will be able to top freedom fries?!

Kaji
01-14-2007, 02:34 AM
I'm willing to bet people were saying the same sorts of things during Herbert Hoover's era. 50 years from now he'll be nothing more than a name on a list to schoolchildren, just like Calvin Coolidge and Warren Harding are to many today.

Jetsetlemming
01-14-2007, 03:43 AM
And the guy that died of the flu a month after becoming pres. :D
Though, now that I think about it, that might have been Calvin Coolidge. *shrug*

Fermented Yeast Paste
01-14-2007, 04:12 AM
William Henry Harrison (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Henry_Harrison) actually, and it was pneumonia, not influenza. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v218/Ph4t3/Emot/emot-eng101.gif

Jetsetlemming
01-14-2007, 04:18 AM
I meant Warren Harding instead of Calvin Coolidge- slip of the figurative tongue.
And same difference. :P

Fermented Yeast Paste
01-14-2007, 04:29 AM
It's alright, I just love that smilie. http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v218/Ph4t3/Emot/emot-eng101.gif