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Kevorkian Visit to University of Florida Upsetting to Students There

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  • Kevorkian Visit to University of Florida Upsetting to Students There

    LifeNews.com, MT
    Aug 10 2007


    Jack Kevorkian Visit to University of Florida Upsetting to Students
    There

    by Steven Ertelt
    LifeNews.com Editor
    August 8, 2007


    Gainesville, FL (LifeNews.com) -- Assisted suicide crusader Jack
    Kevorkian is headed to the University of Florida for an October 11
    speaking engagement -- which will have the college pay him $50,000.
    But the event isn't going over well with students there, who are
    upset that state taxpayer dollars will be used to pay the convicted
    murderer.
    Ashley Emans, a junior at the university, wrote more about the
    speaking engagement in an editorial on Town Hall.

    She said that the student-run speaker's bureau called ACCENT sent
    Kevorkian the speaking offer shortly after his released from prison,
    where he served eight years of a 10-25 year prison sentence for the
    murder of a disabled patient.

    "Kevorkian's UF stop will probably be his first paid public speaking
    engagement since his June 1 release from prison," Emans says and "his
    $50,000 honorarium is subsidized by taxpayer dollars."

    The event will only occur is Kevorkian is granted special permission
    by his parole officer to leave the state and go to Florida.

    While many pro-life students are upset by the appearance, Emans says
    "Kevorkian will be greeted here in Gainesville, Florida with open
    arms from many students and professors."

    "Once again my school is making national headlines for reasons that
    make me cringe. It very rarely speaks for me, and I am ashamed my
    fellow students in the governing body want the cache of Kevorkian at
    the expense of respect or dignity," Emans says in the Town Hall
    editorial.

    Emans pointed out the irony that Terri Schiavo was a victim of
    euthanasia in the same state and that the judge who allowed her
    former husband to take her life was University of Florida graduate
    George Greer.

    "Bioethicist Bill Allen teaches here, who said in an interview that
    he believed Terri Schiavo was not a person," she added.

    Emans concludes that the college is again going out of its way to
    provide its progressive and open-minded credentials, this time by
    embracing someone who has admittedly killed more than 130 people via
    assisted suicide.

    "I take issue with UF falling all over itself to nab Kevorkian
    first," she concluded. "I fail to see what good is to come from using
    taxpayer dollars to preach a religion of death a significant number
    do not subscribe to."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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