Word: fords
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Dean Ford's office was unable to estimate how many Faculty of Arts and Sciences members canceled their classes, or how many students attended those classes which met. But at noontime, the usual crowds of students were absent from the Yard: only a few students changing classes, some strolling couples, and groups of students going to rallies were in evidence...
FURTHER. Miss Mitford outlines so clearly the prejudicial handling of the case by Judge Francis Ford that any lingering belief in equal justice under law is mercifully put to rest. Ford formulated his closing charge to the jury as a barely-veiled order to convict. But we later learn that this becomes the grounds for the appeal that set Spock and Ferber free. Why the other two were not also freed is bewildering save with the sensibility to the workings of the law that the book conveys...
...fairness, it can be said that the convocation's membership was not stacked along any political lines. A broad range of the Faculty's political spectrum was there. President Pusey and Dean Ford were gone; Dean May and Mrs. Bunting stayed, Five or six of the spokesmen for the anti-war petition were there. So was Harrison C. White, professor of Sociology, who chided the Faculty for glibly accepting arguments against the war. The one common factor binding the participants seemed to be their tardiness in getting out the doors...
Harvard personnel have identified some of the CFIA invaders as Harvard students, Dean Ford said last night. None of the students are among the seven being sought by the Cambridge police, however, Ford said. The nine-man Committee on Rights and Responsibilities-which will investigate complaints against Harvard students in the CFIA incident-has not yet received any complaints and will not begin its investigation until it does a committee member said last night...
Three other Faculty supporters of Dorfman's committee- Seymour Martin Lipset, professor of Government and Social Relations: David Reisman '31, Henry Ford II Professor of Social Sciences; and H. Stuart Hughes '40, professor of History- also signed the new statement...