
A group of 10 alumni recently wrote a letter to Wake Forest University President Nathan Hatch, objecting to this year's selection of Charles Ergen, DISH Network chairman and a graduate of the Schools of Business, 
to speak at commencement. The original letter can be found 
here, but we are also including it below so you can judge for yourself. Agree or disagree? You can also view Ergen's speech 
here.
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Dear President Hatch,
As young alumni, we take great interest in following the progress of  our alma mater, an institution of which we are extremely proud. The  education we have received at Wake Forest has given us a broad base of  knowledge, skills, insight, and values. In our lives and careers, the  motto of Pro Humanitate enjoins us to direct our education for the betterment of others, of humanity writ large.
Thus, it is with great concern that we read Charlie Ergen’s remarks  at the 2012 Commencement. Mr. Ergen, the chairman of DISH Network  Corporation and EchoStar Communications Corporation, is now the third  consecutive CEO to speak at Wake Forest’s Commencement. Rather than  focus on the speech, which was riddled with clichés and reductive  statements, as well as addressed primarily to his graduating daughter,  rather than the class of a thousand newly-minted alumni, we’d like to  ask what our choice of commencement speaker reflects about Wake Forest  as an institution.
We are a university that treasures the liberal arts. Every Wake  Forest graduate completes a series of divisional requirements in the  arts, humanities, sciences, and languages. This fundamental education  produces young adults capable of discoursing intelligently on a variety  of topics, speaking languages well enough to comprehend their  literatures, interacting with people from disciplines vastly different  from their own, and sustaining intellectual curiosity long after their  undergraduate years are done. Mr. Ergen quips that most graduates “will  never read another book after today.” These are not words to live by,  and certainly not words to graduate by.
In its ideal form, a liberal arts education nurtures students who  will one day become writers, policy-makers, doctors, musicians, artists,  leaders, and thinkers. It encourages us to be Renaissance men and  women, to change the world through our thoughts and actions. One of the  avenues to pursue this change is through business, but this is surely  not the only path available to liberal arts graduates, and surely not  the only measure of success.
We ask that Wake Forest invite Commencement speakers who promote such  values. Where are the journalists and educators, the politicians and  diplomats, scientists and actors? In the past, Wake Forest has invited  speakers such as Mayor Michael Bloomberg and novelist Tom Clancy, the  cartoonist Garry Trudeau and New York Times columnist David Brooks. We  should aspire for such diversity in our Commencement speakers, for  diversity of opinion and background is the very core of a stimulating  college experience.
It is true that Wake Forest has a successful Business School – this  does not mean that all of our commencement speakers should be tailored  to that audience. Three CEOs in succession simply excludes a large  proportion of the student body, and sends a clarion message that the  other disciplines represented on the Wake Forest campus are not entitled  to a voice at graduation, the most important symbolic day on the  academic calendar.
President Hatch, we ask you to consider creating a committee to elect  and invite a Commencement speaker – a committee that includes students,  faculty, and administration from different fields. We ask that Wake  Forest strive for speakers who speak, not just to a small portion of the  campus, but to all the students and family who have gathered on the  Quad for this meaningful day. We ask for diversity of opinion to be  cherished at our alma mater, and for this diversity to be reflected in  our commencement speakers.
Yours truly,
Lakshmi Krishnan (’06 Carswell Scholar, English and German)
Blake Brandes (’06 Graylyn Scholar, English and French)
Jennifer Harris (’04 Graylyn Scholar, Economics and Political Science)
Stowe Nelson (’08, Carswell Scholar, English)
Kezia McKeague (’05, Reynolds Scholar, Political Science and Spanish)
Valerie Brender (’06, Economics)
Jennifer Barker Lyday (’06, Carswell Scholar, Political Science and Spanish)
Joe Martinez (’06, Communication)
Amy Currie (’05, Psychology)
William Rothwell (’08, Reynolds Scholar, Biology)