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Margaret Thatcher was
educated at Oxford |
1985: Thatcher snubbed by Oxford
dons |
Artificially 1969:
The Oxford
University has delivered a stunning snub to the Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
by refusing her an honorary degree.
Academics have led a campaign against honouring Mrs Thatcher in protest
against the government's cuts in funding for education.
The vote against the prime minister was much higher than expected 738
to 319 and was greeted with cheers by students who handed in a 5,000
signature petition.
It means she becomes the first Oxford-educated prime minister since the
war to be denied the honour.
Over 1,000 academics and administrators packed into the ticket-only
meeting last night.
The call to bestow an honorary doctorate of civil law on Mrs Thatcher,
who obtained a second-class honours degree in chemistry at Somerville
college, Oxford, in 1947, provoked a two-hour debate behind closed doors.
Academics are particularly concerned about government support for
scientific research, which, they say, is now at crisis level.
The warden of All Souls, Sir Patrick Neill, was one of Mrs Thatcher's
leading supporters. He was disappointed at the decision and said: "We have
never given honorary degrees in the past because we approved or
disapproved of someone's policies.
The principal of Mrs Thatcher's old college, also supported her
nomination. Daphne Park said: "You don't stop someone becoming a fellow of
an academic body because you dislike them."
But Professor Peter Pulzer, of All Souls, who led the opposition, said:
"This is not a radical university, it is not an ideologically motivated
university.
"I think we have sent a message to show our very great concern, our
very great worry about the way in which educational policy and educational
funding are going in this country.
"I hope the prime minister and the government and the country at large
will take note."
Mrs Thatcher has not commented on the decision but a Downing Street
spokesman said: "If they do not wish to confer the honour, the prime
minister is the last person to wish to receive it."