Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Approbation of President Conant's policy was made by inference in the Harvard Alumni Bulletin editorial page when it quoted those parts of the report which were most favorable to the administration as the "significant sentences...
...Bulletin declared that "It seems to us that the significant sentences in the report are the following:" and then went on to quote the parts which absolved President Conant from any partiality towards Walsh and Sweezy because of their liberal views...
...appears from the newspaper accounts (the official report not having yet been made available) that this Report is practically an apology for fascism, and is the logical outcome of the committee's whole prejudiced procedure...
...whole-hearted support given by the notorious Mayor of jersey city to this report . . . indicates from what quarters it evokes approbation. . . . This report is intended to divert the public attention from the grave dangers confronting democracy in Massachusetts...
More significant to the future of this university than the careers of two instructors is the problem of the administrative procedure and academic criteria involved in Harvard promotions. From the evidence of the Faculty Committee's report it is apparent that in one case the department concerned, the Dean of the Faculty, and the President became involved in an unnecessary misunderstanding. During the discussion of promotions last year the Department of Economics was never informed as to the full, meaning of the President's ruling. The Dean did not point out to the President the Department's conception...