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Horowitz
Says Amherst Is an 'Il-Liberal College'
lzzy
Lyman
March 14, 2002
David
Horowitz, the author of Radical Son and Hating Whitey, told
a crowd of Amherst College students on Tuesday that the alma
mater of Calvin Coolidge is an "il-liberal college,"
one that promotes only left-wing ideologies.
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David
Horowitz mingles with the crowd after his speech.
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"Half
the country is conservative, and you can't get a good education
if they only tell you one side of the story," said Horowitz.
"[You should] test yourself against other points of view."
He noted that
out of 160 professors at Amherst, only one is a conservative. That
lone figure is Dr. Hadley Arkes, a political science professor who
has taught at the college since 1966. Arkes, whose articles often
appear in National Review and who attended Horowitz's lecture, has
testified before the U.S. Congress on behalf of the "Born-Alive
Infants Protection Act."

Prof.
Hadley Arkes, lone conservative at Amherst College
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"How
the Left Undermined America's Security" was the topic
of Horowitz's talk, which was delivered at Amherst College's
Johnson Chapel. He was in no hurry to discuss national security
concerns, since he began his presentation decrying the lack
of diverse viewpoints among the Amherst College faculty.
The former
leftist, clad in a suit and leather sandals, told the attentive
audience that a recruitment program to include more conservatives
on the Amherst faculty should be created to correct the imbalance.
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When Horowitz
got to the gist of his talk, he said that the first time the World
Trade Center was bombed in 1993 by al-Qaeda terrorists, the response
from the Clinton administration to that tragedy was indifferent.
President Bill Clinton never even toured the bomb crater. "He
[Clinton] is the most wretched human being who has occupied the
White House," said Horowitz, a statement that drew loud applause.
The lecture
was sponsored by Young America's Foundation and the Amherst College
Republicans. Ted Hertzberg, an Amherst College sophomore and an
outspoken conservative activist, served as the master of ceremonies.
Before introducing Horowitz, Hertzberg ridiculed the politically-correct
atmosphere of his school by noting that Amherst is "a little
school in a little town."
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