Monthly Archive for April, 2010

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2010 Census!

If you are a student at Saint Louis University, you are a resident of Saint Louis, and it is to your advantage to fill out a Census form here. The Census has major implications for federal spending in the Saint Louis area, so it is imperitive that YOU are counted.

If you have not received a Census form, there is a table in the Busch Student Center that is handing them out until 2pm today, and 10am-2pm on Friday and Monday. It comes with a prepaid envelope and it only takes a few minutes to fill out, so make sure you get counted!

No Meeting Tonight

We will not have a meeting this week. Use the time to catch up on homework, watch Glee, or maybe check out some cool Carnahans on Facebook:

Robin Carnahan on Facebook
Russ Carnahan on Facebook

Denied Coverage Because of a Pre-Existing Condition? Fine by Blunt.

Let’s send a real leader to the US Senate: RobinCarnahan.com

L. Douglas Wilder Tonight!

The Great Issues Committee has invited the first elected African American governor to speak at SLU. The event will be tonight (4/12) at 7pm in the BSC Wool Ballrooms:


A racial milestone was achieved on January 13, 1990, when L. Douglas Wilder was sworn in as the first elected African-American governor in U.S. history. What made the event even more poignant was that he was elected not in liberal Massachusetts or trendy California, but in Virginia, the centerpiece of the Confederacy during the Civil War, where African-Americans constitute less than 20 percent of the population. Although Governor Wilder’s victory was wafer-thin, it is no less remarkable that four out of five of his supporters were white in a state that once denied him admission to its law schools.

During Governor Wilder’s first year in office, the shaky national economy and reduced defense spending threw Virginia into its worst budget crisis since World War II. Faced with a projected tax shortfall of $1.4 billion, the governor implemented a successful program for reduced spending.

Since leaving the governor’s mansion, Wilder has kept in the middle of current events. He played a major role in the development of The National Slavery Museum in Fredericksburg, VA, and championed the creation of the elected mayor of Virginia’s capitol city. In 2004, after heeding the call of Richmond’s residents and groups across the city, Wilder agreed to run in the first election for the new job, and won overwhelmingly with nearly 80% of the vote.

A veteran of Virginia politics, Wilder was the first African-American elected to the Virginia State Senate in modern times, and after his election as lieutenant governor in 1985, he had become the highest-ranking African-American state official in the nation. In 1992, Wilder was a Democratic candidate for the presidential nomination. His gubernatorial term expired in 1994. His early aggressive style and willingness to break with the leadership of his own party earned him a place among the five most influential members of the Virginia State Senate. He became chair of the powerful Privileges and Elections Committee, which oversees state appointments and voting legislation. Wilder advocated fair-housing legislation, labor union rights for public employees, and more minority hiring in private businesses.

In 1951, Wilder graduated from Virginia Union University in Richmond with a BS degree in chemistry. Shortly after graduating, he was drafted into the United States Army. During the Korean War, he received the Bronze Star for heroism in ground combat for rescuing wounded GIs and capturing enemy troops.

When he decided to take advantage of the GI Bill to study law, he had to leave the state because Virginia barred African-Americans from its law schools at the time. Following his graduation from Howard University Law School, he returned to his old neighborhood in Richmond to establish a private practice.

Throughout his political career, Wilder has volunteered his service to a number of associations, including the American Bar Association, the National Bar Association, and the Virginia State Bar.

In addition to numerous accolades and honorary degrees, Wilder has received a number of awards. They include the NAACP Spingarn Medal, the Anna Eleanor Roosevelt Medallion of Honor, and a Citation of Honor for Contributions to American Politics.


For more information, email gic@slu.edu

Student Loan Reform

From the pages of The Progressive Billiken:

Despite the well-established link between an educated citizenry and a thriving democracy, very little priority is given to expanding access to education in this country. Massive increases in the cost of higher education in the United States have put thousands of students in extraordinary debt, and left thousands of others without access to educational opportunities. The student loan reform measures passed by the Obama Administration mark an important step in reversing this dangerous trend.

For decades, big banks and private lenders have dominated the student loan industry. To create incentive for banks to provide affordable loans to students, the government guaranteed the loans and provided massive subsidies for the lenders. This policy has allowed banks to function as middlemen, extracting massive profits while the government absorbs all the risk. The result is a massive bill to taxpayers and students.

With Obama’s student loan reforms, big banks are removed from the equation. Instead of guaranteeing and subsidizing loans through a third party, the government will simply loan directly to students, cutting out the middleman and, according to the Congressional Budget Office, saving tens of billions of dollars. These savings will then be invested in the Pell Grant program – providing greater access to higher education for low-income students. The reforms also cap annual student-loan repayments at 10% of income, allowing graduates to overcome the incredible burden of debt. Community colleges and minority-serving colleges also receive renewed investment.

Predictably, Republicans have spun student loan reform as a “government take-over.” This is a strange claim considering the fact that the government has been subsidizing and guaranteeing loans for years. The GOP is controlled by a rigid anti-government ideology incompatible with this pragmatic set of reforms. Unfortunately, their opposition has stood in the way of these measures for decades, leaving countless young Americans to be crushed by inescapable debt. They must move past their dogmatic beliefs and join Democrats in a commitment to pragmatic education reform as a national priority.

NEW: Subscribe to Receive Emails

To receive information about SLU College Democrats meetings and events via email, please do the following:

1. Go to www.sludems.com/sign-up
2. Enter your preferred email address
3. Click Subscribe
4. Confirm your subscription by clicking the link in the confirmation email

Due to restraints Gmail places on the number of recipients we send emails to, the College Democrats have decided to begin sending all information about our meetings and events through a Google Group. This will simplify our communications and give you more control over how you receive our emails. You will have complete control over your subscription, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

You can continue to contact us at sluclgdems@gmail.com, but you must subscribe if you wish to receive general emails that alert you to our meetings and events. After Tuesday, April 13th, such emails will only be sent to subscribers.

Meeting Tonight!

The College Democrats will have a meeting tonight (4/6) at 7pm in Beracha Hall room 121.

We will discuss the upcoming Young Democrats of Missouri convention and watch election returns for Proposition A

Obama beats Clark Kellogg at POTUS