Robert L. Stearns Award
Presented to
Ward L. Churchill
By the
University of Colorado
Alumni Association
May 12, 1988
Jean-Paul Sartre observed, “It is the obligation of the oppressed to challenged and break every rule of the oppressor, thus seizing control over his life and his destiny. This should not be viewed as a dynamic destruction, but of creation.” Few words better express the thrust of Ward Churchill’s career at the University of Colorado.
A scholar without proper credentials, Churchill has proceeded to carve himself a niche at the forefront of American Indian and indigenous studies over the past decade, as is attested to by his many books and essays, awards and invited lectures. An administrator without pedigree, he has demonstrated a unique ability to create and maintain programs which stand as national landmarks in allowing ethnic minority and educationally challenged youth access to a state flagship university. Himself a “marginal man,” his effort and concern have been unswervingly devoted to the more disenfranchised among us.
Ward Churchill represents the best things the University stands for: excellence, innovation, equality, industriousness and commitment to a positive vision of the future. By refusing to accept things as they were and are, he has done much to transform CU for the better. And, for this, we owe him a tremendous debt of gratitude. For all of these reasons, the Robert L. Stearns Award could not be more appropriately bestowed.
The Thomas Jefferson Award
Presented to
Ward L. Churchill
By the
University of Colorado
Sponsored by the Robert Earll McConnell Foundation, the Blair Endowment, and the University Alumni Association, this award honors a member of the staff whose life and work promote a Jeffersonian commitment to broad intellectual pursuits and the strong advancement of democratic principles.
Presented to
Ward L. Churchill
For his outstanding contributions to the University of Colorado at Boulder from 1978-1990 in the University Learning Center, the American Indian Studies program, the Educational Development Program, and the American Indian Educational Opportunity Program, and for his magnificent public service with the American Indian Movement of Colorado, the Native American Rights Fund, the Colorado Indian Education Association, as a delegate to working groups of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights, and with numerous other worthy causes.
[signed] E. Gordon Gee
President of the University
May 18, 1990