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Criticism
over
Obama
invite
mounts
at Notre
Dame
By TOM
COYNE
Associated
Press
Writer
Jimmy
Carter
came to
Notre
Dame in
1977. So
did
Ronald
Reagan
in 1981
and
George
W. Bush
in 2001.
The
University
of Notre
Dame has
a
tradition
of
inviting
new
presidents
to speak
at
graduation.
But this
year's
selection
of
President
Barack
Obama
has been
met by a
barrage
of
criticism
that has
left
some
students
fearing
their
commencement
ceremony
will
turn
into a
circus.
Many
Catholics
are
angered
by
Obama's
planned
appearance
at the
May 17
ceremony
because
of his
decisions
to
provide
federal
funding
for
embryonic
stem
cell
research
and
international
family
planning
groups
that
provide
abortions
or
educate
about
the
procedure.
The
consensus
Thursday
on the
campus
of the
nation's
largest
Catholic
university
was that
any
president
should
be
welcomed
at Notre
Dame.
"People
are
definitely
entitled
to their
outrage,
but I
think
the main
thing is
to see
that
it's an
honor to
have the
president
of the
United
States
come to
speak
here
whether
you
agree
with him
or not,"
said
Katie
Woodward,
a
political
science
junior
from
Philadelphia.
Justin
Mack, a
senior
film
major
from
Dallas,
agreed.
"I
didn't
vote for
him and
there
are a
lot of
things I
don't
agree
with him
or
support.
But I
feel
like for
this
event
people
need to
put that
aside,"
said
Mack, a
senior
film
major
from
Dallas.
"My hope
is that
doesn't
distract
too much
from
what the
weekend
is
about,
which is
the
graduation."
But the
distractions
have
been
mounting,
including
sharply
worded
letters
from two
bishops.
Bishop
Thomas
J.
Olmsted
of the
Phoenix
Diocese
on
Wednesday
called
Obama's
selection
a
"public
act of
disobedience"
and "a
grave
mistake."
On
Tuesday,
Bishop
John
D'Arcy
of the
Fort
Wayne-South
Bend
Diocese,
which
includes
Notre
Dame,
said he
would
not
attend
the
ceremony
because
of
Obama's
policies.
Hundreds
of
people
on both
sides of
the
issue
have
sent
letters
to the
student
newspaper,
and a
coalition
of
conservative
student
groups
has
announced
its
opposition.
University
spokesman
Dennis
Brown
says
Notre
Dame
does not
plan to
rescind
the
invitation.
Anyone
associated
with the
university
can
recommend
a
commencement
speaker,
he said,
and the
president
consults
with
university
officers
to see
who
would be
most
appropriate.
Notre
Dame
President
Rev.
John
Jenkins
has said
the
university
does not
condone
all of
Obama's
policies
but that
it's
important
to
engage
in
conversation.
White
House
press
secretary
Robert
Gibbs
said
Thursday
that
Obama
believes
everyone
has the
right to
express
their
opinion,
saying
the
president
met last
week
with
Chicago
Cardinal
Francis
George
and
others
to
discuss
topics
Obama
and the
Catholic
church
are
interested
in.
"He
looks
forward
to
continuing
that
dialogue
in the
leadup
to the
commencement,
and
looks
forward
to
delivering
the
address
in May,"
Gibbs
said.
Bob
Reish,
the
student
body
president
and a
graduating
senior,
said
there is
a
"general
excitement"
about
Obama's
visit,
although
he is
aware
there
are
people
on both
sides of
the
issue.
As of 2
p.m.
Thursday,
The
Observer,
the
student
newspaper,
had
received
612
letters
about
Obama's
appearance
— 313
from
alumni
and 299
from
current
students.
Seventy
percent
of the
alumni
letters
opposed
having
Obama
giving
the
speech,
while 73
percent
of
student
letters
supported
his
appearance.
Among
the 95
seniors
who
wrote
letters,
97
percent
supported
the
president's
invitation.
Sophomore
Kelsey
Fletcher,
a
Japanese
major
from
nearby
Elkhart,
said she
doesn't
think
the
university
should
have
invited
Obama to
speak.
"He
shouldn't
be
giving
the
commencement
address
because
of his
policies,
but once
you
invite
him you
can't
disinvite
him,"
she
said.
"That
would be
rude."
Others
noted
that
Obama is
only
speaking
at three
universities
this
year.
"We
can't
just
forgive
his
viewpoints,
we can't
just let
it go
without
expressing
our
thoughts
on it,"
said
Thomas
Heitker,
a
freshman
biology
major
from
Columbus,
Ohio.
"But
he's
only
speaking
at three
universities
this
year and
to be
one out
of so
many is
something
we
should
be proud
about."
Chris
Carrington,
a
political
science
major
from the
Chicago
area,
said he
doesn't
see how
Obama's
appearance
at Notre
Dame
contradicts
Catholic
values.
"To not
allow
someone
here
because
of their
beliefs
seems a
little
hypocritical
and
contradictory
to what
the
mission
of the
university
and
church
should
be," he
said.
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