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Broadcaster Jennings, cellist Yo-Yo Ma honored at AUB

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  • Broadcaster Jennings, cellist Yo-Yo Ma honored at AUB

    Broadcaster Jennings, cellist Yo-Yo Ma honored at American University of
    Beirut

    .c The Associated Press


    BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - ABC News anchor Peter Jennings and cellist
    Yo-Yo Ma picked up honorary doctoral degrees Saturday at the American
    University of Beirut and paid tribute to the school as a place to turn
    for cultural understanding.

    Jennings, anchor of ABC's World News Tonight with Peter Jennings,
    spent time as a newsman in Beirut in the late 1960s and early
    1970s. He noted the United States has found it challenging to win the
    hearts and mind of people in the region.

    ``I'll go back to the United States and remind my colleagues that if
    we want better understanding we can go back and spend just a little
    time on this campus talking to all the people,'' he said. The
    university has been a meeting point of ideas and people from the
    Middle East and West for more than a century.

    Jennings, the Toronto-born son of a Canadian radio announcer, dropped
    out of high school before launching his career in journalism. He
    served as ABC News bureau chief in Beirut for seven years.

    AUB President John Waterbury jokingly forgave Jennings for his limited
    formal education. Receiving the Doctorate in Humane Letters, Jennings
    opened the folder containing the document and quipped: ``It's true. I
    have one.''

    Receiving his Humane Letters doctorate, Ma spoke about how music
    transcends borders. He picked up his cello and played a few minutes of
    Bach that he offered ``to the amazing history and accomplishments of
    AUB.''

    Also honored at the ceremony were Sir Michael Atiyah, a British
    mathematician of Lebanese father and Scottish mother, and Vartan
    Gregorian, an Iranian-born educator and philanthropist who moved to
    Beirut at age 15 and studied at the Armenian College before studying
    and later teaching at several U.S. universities.

    AUB was founded in 1866 by Christian missionary Dr. Daniel Bliss as
    the Syrian Protestant College and later became nonsectarian and
    independent. The prestigious institution educated many Arab
    politicians. It survived Lebanon's 1975-90 civil war despite being
    targeted by a car bomb and the assassination of its president.

    sfg-sjs



    06/26/04 09:35 EDT
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