Word: citizenships
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...expression in his classroom should not be curbed. The university student should be exposed to competing opinions and beliefs in every field, so that he may learn to weigh them and gain maturity of judgment . . . In teaching, as in research, [the instructor] is limited by the requirements of citizenship, of professional competence and good taste. Having met those standards, he is entitled to all the protection the full resources of the university can provide...
...A.A.U. called loyal citizenship, as well as professional competences as requisites for appointment and retention of a University position. These qualities, it stated, are incompatible with membership in the Communist party...
...most encouraging to read of Paul Blanshard's attempt to have Archbishop O'Hara's American citizenship revoked [TIME, March 2]. I only hope we can count on Blanshard's continuing to make an ass of himself...
...when he had to make up his mind, he was uncertain about whether he would want to continue working in this country-and, if so, to become a citizen eventually-or to return to Canada some day, retaining his citizenship there. Hoping to keep both doors open, he decided to register for the draft and become eligible for induction. This month he was called into the Army...
Last week Blanshard thought he had found, in Dublin, a good object lesson of how Catholicism conflicts with the obligations of U.S. citizens. He called at the U.S. embassy with a petition to the State Department, demanding that the U.S. citizenship of Archbishop Gerald P. O'Hara, papal nuncio to Ireland, be revoked. His reason: Archbishop O'Hara, a native-born American whose diocese is Savannah-Atlanta, Ga., is violating the McCarran Act by serving as an agent of a foreign power. Said Blanshard, in a press conference over his action: "Americans believe that no American...