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...when Pusey became president in June of 1953, he inherited the cases of Wendell H. Furry, Leon J. Kamin and Helen Deane Markham. In February Furry, then an associate professor of Physics, had been called before Congressman Harold H. Velde's House Un-American Affairs Committee and had refused to answer any questions. Kamin, a teaching fellow in Social Relations and Markham, assistant professor of Anatomy, had also invoked the Fifth Amendment in March before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee. The Harvard Corporation was faced with a dilemma: what should be done with these professors...

Author: By Paul DUKE Jr., | Title: Speaking freely in academe? | 6/7/1984 | See Source »

...month before Pusey assumed office, the Corporation decided the three professors would stay, but Kamin and Markham had been found guilty of "misconduct," because invoking the Fifth did not befit scholars who were, in the Corporation's opinion, devoted the the "pursuit of truth" and free inquiry. Furry, however, who had testified in a second hearing that he had ceased being a communist in 1951 and had admitted to Harvard officials that in 1944 he had lied to FBI officials about a colleague's political affiliations, was found guilty of "grave misconduct"--grounds for dismissal...

Author: By Paul DUKE Jr., | Title: Speaking freely in academe? | 6/7/1984 | See Source »

...University kept Furry on, placing him on probation for three years. Furry passed the three years without incident, became a full professor of Physics in 1962, and retired in 1977. Kamin and Markham finished the terms of their unrenewable contracts with Harvard and left. It was Pusey's public statements and handling of these three cases, far more judicious and civil than the actions of many other universities, that set the tenor of Harvard's reputation in the period...

Author: By Paul DUKE Jr., | Title: Speaking freely in academe? | 6/7/1984 | See Source »

...addition to faculty activism on the left, a number of faculty members in this period who were identified with the government or espoused ideas construed as conservative, faced student harassment. Heckling crowds disrupted the classes of, and sometimes followed around the campus, George D. Markham Professor of Government Edward C. Banfield, who had criticized Great Society welfare programs in the ghettoes; Huntington, who had advised the government on Vietnam; and particularly Edgar Pierce Professor of Psychology Richard J. Herrnstein, Herrnstein had written that genetic factors contributed to intelligence more than environment, and although he never mentioned race in his articles...

Author: By Paul DUKE Jr., | Title: Speaking freely in academe? | 6/7/1984 | See Source »

Another admirer his dissertation adviser Markham Professor of Government Edward C. Banfield for example remembers an incident from the late 1960s. When Wilson served as chairman of the Joint Center for Urban Studies of MIT and Harvard...

Author: By Michael J. Abramowitz, | Title: The Heirs Apparent? | 11/12/1983 | See Source »

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