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John Silber

John Robert Silber (August 15, 1926 – September 27, 2012) was an American academician and candidate for public office. From 1971 to 1996, he was President of Boston University (BU) and, from 1996 to 2002, Chancellor. From 2002 to 2003, he again served as President (Ad Interim); and, from 2003 until his death, he held the title of President Emeritus.[1]

John Silber
Chancellor of Boston University
In office
1996–2002
7th President of Boston University
In office
1971–1996
Preceded byCalvin B. T. Lee (Acting)
Succeeded byJon Westling
Personal details
Born
John Robert Silber

(1926-08-15)August 15, 1926
San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
DiedSeptember 27, 2012(2012-09-27) (aged 86)
Brookline, Massachusetts, U.S.
SpouseKathryn Underwood
Children8
EducationTrinity University (BA)
Yale University (PhD)

In 1990, he won the Democratic gubernatorial primary to become one of two major-party candidates for governor of Massachusetts in the general election of 1990. He lost that election to the Republican William Weld, who won by 38,000 votes.[2]

After receiving his PhD from Yale, Silber became professor of philosophy and served as dean of the University of Texas's College of Arts and Sciences (1967–70). He had a liberal reputation in his days at Texas, though at Boston University he was best known as a conservative spokesman in academia.

Family and education edit

Silber was born in San Antonio, Texas,[3] the second son of Paul George Silber, an immigrant architect from Germany,[4] and Jewell (née Joslin) Silber, a Texas-born elementary school teacher. He was born with a malformed right arm that ended in a stump just below his elbow with a rudimentary thumb. Unashamed of the deformity, he had his suits tailored to expose the arm.[5]

Both of his parents were Presbyterians. As an adult, he learned that his father's side of the family was Jewish and that his aunt had been killed at Auschwitz.[6] His father had never said anything about it.[1]

Silber was a member of the National Honor Society at Jefferson High School in San Antonio, and played trumpet in the school band. He graduated from Jefferson in 1943. At Trinity University in San Antonio, he double-majored in fine arts and philosophy.[7]

In the fall of 1943, as a freshman at Trinity, he met a sophomore named Kathryn Underwood, daughter of farmers from Normanna, Texas. The couple were engaged in January 1946 and married on July 12, 1947. Silber graduated summa cum laude from Trinity in June 1947. Silber and his wife had eight children,[5] one son and six daughters by birth and one son by adoption. Their first-born son and daughter were born before 1955. Five more daughters were born over the next eleven years.[8] Their first-born son, David Silber,[9] died of AIDS at age 41 at their home in December 1994.[10][11] Silber's wife Kathryn died in 2005.[5]

Early academic career edit

Silber received his M.A. in 1952 and worked first as a teaching assistant and then as an instructor while pursuing a doctoral degree. Peter H. Hare, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at SUNY-Buffalo, remembers Silber as a teaching assistant at Yale in the mid-1950s while Hare was still an undergraduate. Hare wrote, "George Schrader was the lecturer in the introductory course where John Silber was the TA leading my discussion section. Silber, a rabid Kantian, was the person with whom I had my first heated philosophical arguments as an adult."[12]

In 1959, Silber earned a Fulbright scholarship, which enabled him to travel to West Germany to teach at the University of Bonn for a year. It was there that he learned of his father's Jewish heritage.[1]

His first full-time faculty job was at the University of Texas at Austin, where he chaired the Philosophy department from 1962 to 1967. Larry Hickman, Director of the Center for Dewey Studies at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale, recalls his time as a student in philosophy at UT. "The department chairs during those years, John Silber and Irwin C. Lieb, were busy using Texas oil money to collect the very best faculty and graduate students they could find."[13]

While at UT, Silber was well known for his support of liberal causes, having founded the Texas society to abolish capital punishment[14] and being a supporter of civil rights.[5]

In 1967, Silber became Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at UT. Three years later, in a widely publicized firing, Silber was removed as Dean in 1970 by the UT Regents Chairman Frank Craig Erwin, Jr.[15]

Boston University edit

Silber was appointed president of Boston University (BU) on December 17, 1970 and took office the following month.[16] [17] With an annual salary that reached $800,000, Silber ranked as one of the highest paid college presidents in the country. He took a one-year leave of absence from BU in 1987, and then again in 1990 when he ran for governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat. He returned to his position at BU after losing the election to William Weld.[18] In 1996, he was named university chancellor after retiring as president. That same year he was appointed by Governor Weld to serve as Chair of the Massachusetts Board of Education.

Among Silber's recruits to the Boston University faculty were the author Saul Bellow and Elie Wiesel, writer and concentration camp survivor.

Tension with faculty and students edit

Under Silber, Boston University increased in size but questions about his leadership style caused divisions among faculty and alumni. In his early days as BU President, Silber accused the faculty of mediocrity and the students of fostering anarchy, and they, in turn, accused him of tyrannical rule. The faculty organized a union in 1974 and the following year voted to affiliate with the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). Fritz Ringer, a BU faculty member, served as president of the BU chapter of the AAUP for eight years.

According to Perspectives Online, the publication of the American Historical Association, "at a time when the BU president (Silber) was running roughshod over faculty rights, Fritz Ringer bravely and vigorously championed the principles of academic freedom."[19][20]

Initially, the Silber administration would not negotiate with the union, and in 1976 his refusal was challenged in a lawsuit. Two-thirds of the faculty and deans demanded that the board of trustees dismiss Silber, but the board refused. In 1978, a Federal court decided in favor of the AAUP position, and Boston University was forced to negotiate with the faculty union. The faculty conducted a strike in 1979, which was followed by a clerical workers' walkout in which several faculty members refused to cross the picket line. Silber charged five of these faculty members with negligence and moved to penalize them. At that point, faculty members throughout Boston signed a petition for the removal of Silber as university president, though it was to no avail.[21]

Silber was especially visible in confrontations with historian Howard Zinn. In one incident, Zinn arranged to take a sabbatical and teach in Paris, with Herbert Marcuse teaching at BU in Zinn's place. But Silber vetoed the action. Silber also prevented Zinn from receiving pay raises and promotions over a number of years. In 1982, the AAUP intervened on Zinn's behalf, eventually forcing Silber to compensate Zinn for back pay.[22] In addition, Jason Pramas wrote about Silber suppressing an anti-apartheid protest in 1986.[23]

In 1987, Federal courts ruled that faculty in the local AAUP chapter were "managerial" employees and therefore could not engage in collective bargaining with Boston University. [24]

Endowment investment controversy edit

During his tenure as president, $85 million, nearly one fifth of the Boston University endowment, was invested in a biotechnology company named Seragen. Investments continued, even after a rebuke from state regulators because of the risk involved. The bulk of the investment was lost when the Seragen stock collapsed.[9][25]

Gay rights issues edit

In 2002, Silber ordered that the Boston University Academy, a prep school operated by BU, disband its gay–straight alliance, a student club that staged demonstrations to publicize the detrimental effects of homophobia. Silber dismissed the stated purpose of the club—to serve as a support organizaton for gay students and to promote tolerance and understanding between gay and straight students— and he accused the club of being a vehicle for "homosexual recruitment." Silber denounced the club for "evangelism" and "homosexual militancy" with the purpose of promoting gay sex. [11]

Silber's deferred compensation edit

On May 10, 2006, The New York Times reported that the trustees of Boston University had given Silber an unprecedented compensation package, including deferred compensation, worth $6.1 million in 2005.[26]

Political activities edit

Silber advocated integration at the University of Texas and was the first person to chair the Texas Society to Abolish Capital Punishment.[14] He also promoted Operation Head Start, an early education program for preschoolers.[citation needed]

In the Massachusetts gubernatorial election of 1990, Silber ran for Governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat. His outsider status, as well as his outspoken and combative persona, were at first viewed as advantages during a year in which voters were disenchanted with the Democratic Party establishment. As the Democratic nominee, Silber faced Republican William Weld.

Silber's perceived angry personality, along with Weld's socially liberal views, aided Weld in the race. During the campaign, Silber regularly overreacted to questions from the media, and these over-reactions came to be known as "Silber shockers." On the campaign trail, he called Massachusetts a "welfare magnet" and proposed the termination of public benefits for unmarried mothers who have a second child while still on public aid. He questioned saving the lives of terminally ill elderly people, quoting Shakespeare and saying "when you've had a long life and you're ripe, then it's time to go."

Silber also stated that the feminist Gloria Steinem, the black Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, and white supremacists are "the kind of people I wouldn't appoint as judges."[6] In a key interview late in the campaign, Silber was asked by WCVB-TV newscaster Natalie Jacobson to name a weakness; he testily replied, "you find a weakness, I don't have to go around telling you what's wrong with me."[27] After this performance, Silber's poll numbers declined rapidly. Ultimately, Weld was able to hold on to a significant portion of the Republican base while appealing to large numbers of Democrats and left-of-center independents, enabling him to defeat Silber by four points. Weld became the first Republican elected as governor since 1970. Republicans would end up winning all but two Massachusetts gubernatorial elections between 1990 and 2018.[28]

Publications edit

Silber wrote four books. Straight Shooting: What's Wrong with America and How to Fix It (Harper & Row, 1989), Architecture of the Absurd: How "Genius" Disfigured a Practical Art (Quantuck Lane, 2007), Kant's Ethics: The Good, Freedom, and the Will (DeGruyter, 2012) and Seeking the North Star (David R. Godine, Publisher, 2013).

Straight Shooting is part autobiography and partly a statement of Silber's concern that the United States has experienced a decline in moral and spiritual values traceable to excessive avarice and materialism. He also faults society with excessive reliance on litigation to settle disputes.

Architecture of the Absurd discusses Silber's view that certain celebrity architects frequently fail to meet the needs of their clients because they consider themselves primarily sculptors and do not adequately consider financial constraints, the physical needs of building occupants or the urban environment. He is critical of architects Josep Lluís Sert, Le Corbusier, Frank Gehry, Daniel Libeskind and Steven Holl.[29]

In 1976, BU published a 32-page article by Silber called "Democracy: Its Counterfeits and Its Promise". Some of Silber's other articles have been published in Philosophical Quarterly, Philosophical Review, and Kant-Studien, of which he served as editor.

Legacy edit

On May 14, 2008, Sherborn Street, which bisects the main BU Campus from Commonwealth Avenue to Back Street, was officially renamed by the City of Boston. Mayor Thomas Menino said that it was fitting to rename the street John R. Silber Way.[30] "Was there any other way?" Menino quipped, referring to Silber's four decades of influence on the BU campus.[31]

Death edit

Boston University announced Silber's death on September 27, 2012.[5][32][33] He was 86. At a memorial service on November 29, 2012, writer Tom Wolfe spoke to the 750 people who gathered, saying that Silber was a man who "couldn't bring himself to flatter."[34]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c McFadden, Robert D. (September 27, 2012). "John Silber, Boston University President, Dies at 86". The New York Times.
  2. ^ Weld Beats Silber In Tight Governor's Race | News | The Harvard Crimson
  3. ^ John Silber Feted at Gala Tribute - re> BOSTON, April 13 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/
  4. ^ Levinson, Arlene (April 1, 1990). "Texan Gunning for Massachusetts Governorship : Politics: John Silber's take-no-prisoners style raises hackles and consciousness among more genteel Bay Staters". Los Angeles Times.
  5. ^ a b c d e Feeney, Mark (September 28, 2012). "Former Boston University president John Silber dies at 86". Boston Globe. Boston Globe Media Partners, LLC. p. A.1. Retrieved September 26, 2015.
  6. ^ a b Barron, James (20 Sep 1990). "THE 1990 CAMPAIGN: Man in the News; Outspoken Newcomer: Dr. John Robert Silber". New York Times. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  7. ^ THE ALCALDE, July/August 2007, p. 30.
  8. ^ Boston University News Release March 26, 2005 "Kathryn Underwood Silber: Texas Native Was First Lady of Boston University for 25 Years" September 11, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b Barboza, David (September 20, 1998). "Loving A Stock, Not Wisely But Too Well". New York Times. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
  10. ^ "Profile: Applying the Silber Standard to Boston U." by David Barboza The New York Times Nov. 5, 1995
  11. ^ a b "The Last Candid Man, A Homophobe Hides Behind His Right to Discriminate" 2007-03-13 at the Wayback Machine, by Richard Goldstein, The Village Voice, October 15, 2002
  12. ^ A Philosophical Autobiography 2007-08-10 at the Wayback Machine by the late Peter H. Hare, Professor Emeritus, SUNY at Buffalo
  13. ^ A Philosophical Autobiography 2007-08-10 at the Wayback Machine by Larry Hickman
  14. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2005-04-08. Retrieved 2005-04-12.
  15. ^ ERWIN, FRANK CRAIG, JR. | The Handbook of Texas Online| Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)
  16. ^ AP (December 18, 1970). "BU Selects Texan As Its President". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved September 29, 2012.
  17. ^ Harris, Joyce Saenz (December 29, 1991). "John Silber The Texan in exile is Boston University's feisty philosopher-king". The Dallas Morning News.
  18. ^ Russell, Jenna (July 10, 2002). "Westling Resigns As BU President, Silber Takes Reins". The Boston Globe.
  19. ^ http://www.historians.org/perspectives/issues/2006/0610/0610mem2.cfm "Fritz K. Ringer" Perspectives Online published by the American Historical Association ISSN 1556-8563 October 2006
  20. ^ Fritz K. Ringer in University Times, the faculty and staff newspaper at University of Pittsburgh.
  21. ^ Zinn, Howard (June 1980). "To Disagree Is to Be Put on the Enemies List". The Progressive. 44 (6).
  22. ^ Greenberg, David (March 19, 2003). "Howard Zinn's Influential Mutilations of American History". The New Republic. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  23. ^ Pramas, Jason (March 14, 2023). "BU's John Silber Did Not Support Free Speech on His Campus". Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism.
  24. ^ Euben, Donna (20 July 2006). "Collective Bargaining Revised and Revisited (2001)". AAUP. Retrieved February 23, 2014.
  25. ^ Jennifer Babson, "Troubled Seragen sold to Calif. biotech firm" The Boston Globe, May 12, 1998
  26. ^ "Boston University Gave Ex-Chief $6.1 Million, Officials Disclose", The New York Times, May 10, 2006
  27. ^ "John Silber On His Strengths And Weaknesses". WBUR-FM. Archived from the original on 2021-12-13. Retrieved February 21, 2018 – via YouTube.
  28. ^ Time, October 1, 1990
  29. ^ "Celebrity Architects", Silber, J. The New York Times, December 22, 2007.
  30. ^ "Silber Way". Retrieved February 21, 2018 – via Google Maps.
  31. ^ Levenson, Michael (May 15, 2008). "Doing it my way". The Boston Globe.
  32. ^ Robert D. McFadden (September 27, 2012). "John Silber Dies at 86; Led Boston University". The New York Times.
  33. ^ Roger Kimball (November 2012). "John Silber, 1926-2012". The New Criterion.
  34. ^ Goldscheider, Eric (November 30, 2012). "Illustrious Friends Remember John R. Silber". texasexes.org.

Further reading edit

  • Aeschliman, Michael D., (13 October 2012). "Dr. Valiant-For-Truth", National Review
  • Aeschliman, Michael D., (16 April 2014). "A Texan to the Rescue", National Review
  • Allis, Sam, (August 28, 1989). , Time,69
  • Kimball, Roger. "John Silber, 1926–2012", New Criterion (November 2012) Vol. 31, No. 3 online
  • Lewis, Anthony (November 9, 1990). "ABROAD AT HOME; The Limits to Anger". The New York Times.
  • Silber, John R. (1989). Straight Shooting: What's Wrong with America and How to Fix It. HarperCollins. ISBN 0060161841.
  • Silber, John R. (2007). Architecture of the Absurd: How "Genius" Disfigured a Practical Art. The Quantuck Lane Press. ISBN 978-1593720278.
  • Silber, John R. (2012). Kant's Ethics. De Gruyter. ISBN 978-1614510710.
  • Silber, John R. (2013). Seeking the North Star: Selected Speeches. David R Godine. ISBN 978-1567925074.

External links edit

  • Video of Debate between Silber and Noam Chomsky over the Nicaraguan Contras on YouTube and Transcript at the Library of Congress Web Archives (archived September 17, 2001)
  • Village Voice article accusing Silber of bigotry and homophobia 2007-03-13 at the Wayback Machine
  • Freiberg, Peter (November 26, 2002). . The Advocate. Archived from the original on May 8, 2006.
  • New York Review of Books sequence of letters:
    • Letter from professors at Boston University accusing Silber of violating academic freedom
    • Response to the letter by the Boston University professors from a Silber supporter
    • Rebuttal by the Boston University professors to the response by the Silber supporter
  • John Silber collected news and commentary at The New York Times
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Academic offices
Preceded by Seventh President of Boston University
1971–1996
Succeeded by
Jon Westling (Eighth President)
Preceded by
position created
Chancellor of Boston University
1996–2002
Succeeded by
position unfilled
Preceded by
Jon Westling (Eighth President)
President (Ad Interim) of Boston University
2002–2003
Succeeded by
Aram Chobanian
(President Ad Interim)
Party political offices
Preceded by Massachusetts Democratic Party gubernatorial candidate
1990 (lost)
Succeeded by

john, silber, john, robert, silber, august, 1926, september, 2012, american, academician, candidate, public, office, from, 1971, 1996, president, boston, university, from, 1996, 2002, chancellor, from, 2002, 2003, again, served, president, interim, from, 2003,. John Robert Silber August 15 1926 September 27 2012 was an American academician and candidate for public office From 1971 to 1996 he was President of Boston University BU and from 1996 to 2002 Chancellor From 2002 to 2003 he again served as President Ad Interim and from 2003 until his death he held the title of President Emeritus 1 John SilberChancellor of Boston UniversityIn office 1996 20027th President of Boston UniversityIn office 1971 1996Preceded byCalvin B T Lee Acting Succeeded byJon WestlingPersonal detailsBornJohn Robert Silber 1926 08 15 August 15 1926San Antonio Texas U S DiedSeptember 27 2012 2012 09 27 aged 86 Brookline Massachusetts U S SpouseKathryn UnderwoodChildren8EducationTrinity University BA Yale University PhD In 1990 he won the Democratic gubernatorial primary to become one of two major party candidates for governor of Massachusetts in the general election of 1990 He lost that election to the Republican William Weld who won by 38 000 votes 2 After receiving his PhD from Yale Silber became professor of philosophy and served as dean of the University of Texas s College of Arts and Sciences 1967 70 He had a liberal reputation in his days at Texas though at Boston University he was best known as a conservative spokesman in academia Contents 1 Family and education 2 Early academic career 3 Boston University 3 1 Tension with faculty and students 3 2 Endowment investment controversy 3 3 Gay rights issues 3 4 Silber s deferred compensation 4 Political activities 5 Publications 6 Legacy 7 Death 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksFamily and education editSilber was born in San Antonio Texas 3 the second son of Paul George Silber an immigrant architect from Germany 4 and Jewell nee Joslin Silber a Texas born elementary school teacher He was born with a malformed right arm that ended in a stump just below his elbow with a rudimentary thumb Unashamed of the deformity he had his suits tailored to expose the arm 5 Both of his parents were Presbyterians As an adult he learned that his father s side of the family was Jewish and that his aunt had been killed at Auschwitz 6 His father had never said anything about it 1 Silber was a member of the National Honor Society at Jefferson High School in San Antonio and played trumpet in the school band He graduated from Jefferson in 1943 At Trinity University in San Antonio he double majored in fine arts and philosophy 7 In the fall of 1943 as a freshman at Trinity he met a sophomore named Kathryn Underwood daughter of farmers from Normanna Texas The couple were engaged in January 1946 and married on July 12 1947 Silber graduated summa cum laude from Trinity in June 1947 Silber and his wife had eight children 5 one son and six daughters by birth and one son by adoption Their first born son and daughter were born before 1955 Five more daughters were born over the next eleven years 8 Their first born son David Silber 9 died of AIDS at age 41 at their home in December 1994 10 11 Silber s wife Kathryn died in 2005 5 Early academic career editSilber received his M A in 1952 and worked first as a teaching assistant and then as an instructor while pursuing a doctoral degree Peter H Hare Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at SUNY Buffalo remembers Silber as a teaching assistant at Yale in the mid 1950s while Hare was still an undergraduate Hare wrote George Schrader was the lecturer in the introductory course where John Silber was the TA leading my discussion section Silber a rabid Kantian was the person with whom I had my first heated philosophical arguments as an adult 12 In 1959 Silber earned a Fulbright scholarship which enabled him to travel to West Germany to teach at the University of Bonn for a year It was there that he learned of his father s Jewish heritage 1 His first full time faculty job was at the University of Texas at Austin where he chaired the Philosophy department from 1962 to 1967 Larry Hickman Director of the Center for Dewey Studies at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale recalls his time as a student in philosophy at UT The department chairs during those years John Silber and Irwin C Lieb were busy using Texas oil money to collect the very best faculty and graduate students they could find 13 While at UT Silber was well known for his support of liberal causes having founded the Texas society to abolish capital punishment 14 and being a supporter of civil rights 5 In 1967 Silber became Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at UT Three years later in a widely publicized firing Silber was removed as Dean in 1970 by the UT Regents Chairman Frank Craig Erwin Jr 15 Boston University editSilber was appointed president of Boston University BU on December 17 1970 and took office the following month 16 17 With an annual salary that reached 800 000 Silber ranked as one of the highest paid college presidents in the country He took a one year leave of absence from BU in 1987 and then again in 1990 when he ran for governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat He returned to his position at BU after losing the election to William Weld 18 In 1996 he was named university chancellor after retiring as president That same year he was appointed by Governor Weld to serve as Chair of the Massachusetts Board of Education Among Silber s recruits to the Boston University faculty were the author Saul Bellow and Elie Wiesel writer and concentration camp survivor Tension with faculty and students edit Under Silber Boston University increased in size but questions about his leadership style caused divisions among faculty and alumni In his early days as BU President Silber accused the faculty of mediocrity and the students of fostering anarchy and they in turn accused him of tyrannical rule The faculty organized a union in 1974 and the following year voted to affiliate with the American Association of University Professors AAUP Fritz Ringer a BU faculty member served as president of the BU chapter of the AAUP for eight years According to Perspectives Online the publication of the American Historical Association at a time when the BU president Silber was running roughshod over faculty rights Fritz Ringer bravely and vigorously championed the principles of academic freedom 19 20 Initially the Silber administration would not negotiate with the union and in 1976 his refusal was challenged in a lawsuit Two thirds of the faculty and deans demanded that the board of trustees dismiss Silber but the board refused In 1978 a Federal court decided in favor of the AAUP position and Boston University was forced to negotiate with the faculty union The faculty conducted a strike in 1979 which was followed by a clerical workers walkout in which several faculty members refused to cross the picket line Silber charged five of these faculty members with negligence and moved to penalize them At that point faculty members throughout Boston signed a petition for the removal of Silber as university president though it was to no avail 21 Silber was especially visible in confrontations with historian Howard Zinn In one incident Zinn arranged to take a sabbatical and teach in Paris with Herbert Marcuse teaching at BU in Zinn s place But Silber vetoed the action Silber also prevented Zinn from receiving pay raises and promotions over a number of years In 1982 the AAUP intervened on Zinn s behalf eventually forcing Silber to compensate Zinn for back pay 22 In addition Jason Pramas wrote about Silber suppressing an anti apartheid protest in 1986 23 In 1987 Federal courts ruled that faculty in the local AAUP chapter were managerial employees and therefore could not engage in collective bargaining with Boston University 24 Endowment investment controversy edit During his tenure as president 85 million nearly one fifth of the Boston University endowment was invested in a biotechnology company named Seragen Investments continued even after a rebuke from state regulators because of the risk involved The bulk of the investment was lost when the Seragen stock collapsed 9 25 Gay rights issues edit In 2002 Silber ordered that the Boston University Academy a prep school operated by BU disband its gay straight alliance a student club that staged demonstrations to publicize the detrimental effects of homophobia Silber dismissed the stated purpose of the club to serve as a support organizaton for gay students and to promote tolerance and understanding between gay and straight students and he accused the club of being a vehicle for homosexual recruitment Silber denounced the club for evangelism and homosexual militancy with the purpose of promoting gay sex 11 Silber s deferred compensation edit On May 10 2006 The New York Times reported that the trustees of Boston University had given Silber an unprecedented compensation package including deferred compensation worth 6 1 million in 2005 26 Political activities editSilber advocated integration at the University of Texas and was the first person to chair the Texas Society to Abolish Capital Punishment 14 He also promoted Operation Head Start an early education program for preschoolers citation needed In the Massachusetts gubernatorial election of 1990 Silber ran for Governor of Massachusetts as a Democrat His outsider status as well as his outspoken and combative persona were at first viewed as advantages during a year in which voters were disenchanted with the Democratic Party establishment As the Democratic nominee Silber faced Republican William Weld Silber s perceived angry personality along with Weld s socially liberal views aided Weld in the race During the campaign Silber regularly overreacted to questions from the media and these over reactions came to be known as Silber shockers On the campaign trail he called Massachusetts a welfare magnet and proposed the termination of public benefits for unmarried mothers who have a second child while still on public aid He questioned saving the lives of terminally ill elderly people quoting Shakespeare and saying when you ve had a long life and you re ripe then it s time to go Silber also stated that the feminist Gloria Steinem the black Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan and white supremacists are the kind of people I wouldn t appoint as judges 6 In a key interview late in the campaign Silber was asked by WCVB TV newscaster Natalie Jacobson to name a weakness he testily replied you find a weakness I don t have to go around telling you what s wrong with me 27 After this performance Silber s poll numbers declined rapidly Ultimately Weld was able to hold on to a significant portion of the Republican base while appealing to large numbers of Democrats and left of center independents enabling him to defeat Silber by four points Weld became the first Republican elected as governor since 1970 Republicans would end up winning all but two Massachusetts gubernatorial elections between 1990 and 2018 28 Publications editSilber wrote four books Straight Shooting What s Wrong with America and How to Fix It Harper amp Row 1989 Architecture of the Absurd How Genius Disfigured a Practical Art Quantuck Lane 2007 Kant s Ethics The Good Freedom and the Will DeGruyter 2012 and Seeking the North Star David R Godine Publisher 2013 Straight Shooting is part autobiography and partly a statement of Silber s concern that the United States has experienced a decline in moral and spiritual values traceable to excessive avarice and materialism He also faults society with excessive reliance on litigation to settle disputes Architecture of the Absurd discusses Silber s view that certain celebrity architects frequently fail to meet the needs of their clients because they consider themselves primarily sculptors and do not adequately consider financial constraints the physical needs of building occupants or the urban environment He is critical of architects Josep Lluis Sert Le Corbusier Frank Gehry Daniel Libeskind and Steven Holl 29 In 1976 BU published a 32 page article by Silber called Democracy Its Counterfeits and Its Promise Some of Silber s other articles have been published in Philosophical Quarterly Philosophical Review and Kant Studien of which he served as editor Legacy editOn May 14 2008 Sherborn Street which bisects the main BU Campus from Commonwealth Avenue to Back Street was officially renamed by the City of Boston Mayor Thomas Menino said that it was fitting to rename the street John R Silber Way 30 Was there any other way Menino quipped referring to Silber s four decades of influence on the BU campus 31 Death editBoston University announced Silber s death on September 27 2012 5 32 33 He was 86 At a memorial service on November 29 2012 writer Tom Wolfe spoke to the 750 people who gathered saying that Silber was a man who couldn t bring himself to flatter 34 References edit a b c McFadden Robert D September 27 2012 John Silber Boston University President Dies at 86 The New York Times Weld Beats Silber In Tight Governor s Race News The Harvard Crimson John Silber Feted at Gala Tribute re gt BOSTON April 13 PRNewswire USNewswire Levinson Arlene April 1 1990 Texan Gunning for Massachusetts Governorship Politics John Silber s take no prisoners style raises hackles and consciousness among more genteel Bay Staters Los Angeles Times a b c d e Feeney Mark September 28 2012 Former Boston University president John Silber dies at 86 Boston Globe Boston Globe Media Partners LLC p A 1 Retrieved September 26 2015 a b Barron James 20 Sep 1990 THE 1990 CAMPAIGN Man in the News Outspoken Newcomer Dr John Robert Silber New York Times Retrieved 23 February 2014 THE ALCALDE July August 2007 p 30 Boston University News Release March 26 2005 Kathryn Underwood Silber Texas Native Was First Lady of Boston University for 25 Years Archived September 11 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Barboza David September 20 1998 Loving A Stock Not Wisely But Too Well New York Times Retrieved February 21 2014 Profile Applying the Silber Standard to Boston U by David Barboza The New York Times Nov 5 1995 a b The Last Candid Man A Homophobe Hides Behind His Right to Discriminate Archived 2007 03 13 at the Wayback Machine by Richard Goldstein The Village Voice October 15 2002 A Philosophical Autobiography Archived 2007 08 10 at the Wayback Machine by the late Peter H Hare Professor Emeritus SUNY at Buffalo A Philosophical Autobiography Archived 2007 08 10 at the Wayback Machine by Larry Hickman a b BU bio Archived from the original on 2005 04 08 Retrieved 2005 04 12 ERWIN FRANK CRAIG JR The Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association TSHA AP December 18 1970 BU Selects Texan As Its President Bangor Daily News Retrieved September 29 2012 Harris Joyce Saenz December 29 1991 John Silber The Texan in exile is Boston University s feisty philosopher king The Dallas Morning News Russell Jenna July 10 2002 Westling Resigns As BU President Silber Takes Reins The Boston Globe http www historians org perspectives issues 2006 0610 0610mem2 cfm Fritz K Ringer Perspectives Online published by the American Historical Association ISSN 1556 8563 October 2006 https web archive org web 20060901085621 http mac10 umc pitt edu u FMPro db ustory amp lay a amp format d html amp storyid 4301 amp Find Fritz K Ringer in University Times the faculty and staff newspaper at University of Pittsburgh Zinn Howard June 1980 To Disagree Is to Be Put on the Enemies List The Progressive 44 6 Greenberg David March 19 2003 Howard Zinn s Influential Mutilations of American History The New Republic Retrieved March 19 2013 Pramas Jason March 14 2023 BU s John Silber Did Not Support Free Speech on His Campus Boston Institute for Nonprofit Journalism Euben Donna 20 July 2006 Collective Bargaining Revised and Revisited 2001 AAUP Retrieved February 23 2014 Jennifer Babson Troubled Seragen sold to Calif biotech firm The Boston Globe May 12 1998 Boston University Gave Ex Chief 6 1 Million Officials Disclose The New York Times May 10 2006 John Silber On His Strengths And Weaknesses WBUR FM Archived from the original on 2021 12 13 Retrieved February 21 2018 via YouTube Throw Some of the Bums Out Time October 1 1990 Celebrity Architects Silber J The New York Times December 22 2007 Silber Way Retrieved February 21 2018 via Google Maps Levenson Michael May 15 2008 Doing it my way The Boston Globe Robert D McFadden September 27 2012 John Silber Dies at 86 Led Boston University The New York Times Roger Kimball November 2012 John Silber 1926 2012 The New Criterion Goldscheider Eric November 30 2012 Illustrious Friends Remember John R Silber texasexes org Further reading editAeschliman Michael D 13 October 2012 Dr Valiant For Truth National Review Aeschliman Michael D 16 April 2014 A Texan to the Rescue National Review Allis Sam August 28 1989 The Ivory Tower Triggerman Time 69 Kimball Roger John Silber 1926 2012 New Criterion November 2012 Vol 31 No 3 online Lewis Anthony November 9 1990 ABROAD AT HOME The Limits to Anger The New York Times Silber John R 1989 Straight Shooting What s Wrong with America and How to Fix It HarperCollins ISBN 0060161841 Silber John R 2007 Architecture of the Absurd How Genius Disfigured a Practical Art The Quantuck Lane Press ISBN 978 1593720278 Silber John R 2012 Kant s Ethics De Gruyter ISBN 978 1614510710 Silber John R 2013 Seeking the North Star Selected Speeches David R Godine ISBN 978 1567925074 External links editBoston University s biography of Silber Video of Debate between Silber and Noam Chomsky over the Nicaraguan Contras on YouTube and Transcript at the Library of Congress Web Archives archived September 17 2001 Village Voice article accusing Silber of bigotry and homophobia Archived 2007 03 13 at the Wayback Machine Freiberg Peter November 26 2002 The Boston bully Boston U chancellor John Silber had a gay son who died of AIDS So why is he such a dedicated homophobe The Advocate Archived from the original on May 8 2006 New York Review of Books sequence of letters Letter from professors at Boston University accusing Silber of violating academic freedom Response to the letter by the Boston University professors from a Silber supporter Rebuttal by the Boston University professors to the response by the Silber supporter John Silber collected news and commentary at The New York Times Appearances on C SPANAcademic officesPreceded byCalvin B T Lee Acting Seventh President of Boston University1971 1996 Succeeded byJon Westling Eighth President Preceded byposition created Chancellor of Boston University1996 2002 Succeeded byposition unfilledPreceded byJon Westling Eighth President President Ad Interim of Boston University2002 2003 Succeeded byAram Chobanian President Ad Interim Party political officesPreceded byMichael Dukakis Massachusetts Democratic Party gubernatorial candidate1990 lost Succeeded byMark Roosevelt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Silber amp oldid 1212450102, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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