Search the Record 





View past issues
Record


e-Record
Subscribe to
receive Record
headlines
via e-mail

Washington University in St. Louis

February 4, 2005
Vol. 29, No. 20

Front Page
Medical News
Calendar
Notables
Campus Watch
Sports
Record Staff
Employment

Abby Hollander's
camp experiences help her succeed



To Current Issue
Oct. 15, 2009




Comments,
story ideas

E-mail the Record



February 4, 2005 > Assembly Series: Kerrey to deliver Stein Lecture in Ethics Feb. 8

Assembly Series: Kerrey to deliver Stein Lecture in Ethics Feb. 8

By Kurt Mueller

Robert Kerrey, president of New School University, 9-11 commissioner and former U.S. senator from Nebraska, will deliver the Stein Lecture in Ethics as part of the Assembly Series at 4 p.m. Feb. 8 in Graham Chapel.

His talk, "Uncovering the Truth in a Democratic Society," will focus on his work with the 9-11 Commission.

Kerrey, Robert
Robert Kerrey

After completing pharmacy school at the University of Nebraska, Kerrey joined the Navy in 1965 and was trained as a SEAL, specializing in underwater demolition.

He became a highly decorated Vietnam veteran and was awarded the Medal of Honor. In 1969, a grenade explosion injured Kerrey, resulting in a leg amputation.

Returning to Nebraska and civilian life, he became a businessman, building a chain of successful restaurants and health clubs.

Kerrey switched his registration from Republican to Democrat in 1978, and in 1982 he made a successful run for governorship of Nebraska, a heavily Republican state. He then declined to serve a second term.

When U.S. Sen. Edward Zorinsky died in 1987, Kerrey re-entered politics and won the seat.

In the Senate, Kerrey served on the Intelligence Committee, co-chaired the Bipartisan Commission on Entitlement and Tax Reform and headed the Congressional Web-Based Education Commission. Kerrey made a failed bid to become the Democratic presidential nominee in 1992.

New School University offered Kerrey its head position in 2001. That same year, he confessed to his involvement in an incident in Vietnam as a leader of a team that killed a number of innocent women and children. This episode is chronicled in his 2002 memoir, When I Was A Young Man: A Memoir.

Kerrey continues to serve the public by co-chairing the Concord Coalition, a nonpartisan, grass-roots organization advocating fiscal responsibility while ensuring that Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid are secure for all generations.

Assembly Series talks are free and open to the public. For more information, call 935-4620 or go online to assemblyseries.wustl.edu.



News & Information  |   WUSTL Home  |   To Current Record Issue

Front Page | Medical News | Calendar | Notables | Campus Watch | Sports
Washington People | Record Staff | Employment | WUSTL Magazine | Outlook Magazine

The Record is the University's weekly newspaper for faculty, staff and students.

Questions or comments? E-mail the editor or call (314) 935-6603.
Problems with this site? E-mail our Web team.
Copyright ©2003-06 Washington University in St. Louis.  All Rights Reserved.