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David L. Aberle, former head of the Brandeis anthropology department and his wife, Kathleen Gough Aberle, assistant professor of anthropology, have resigned in the face of harsh criticism from Brandeis president Abram L. Sachar concerning a pro-Cuba speech made by Mrs. Aberle at the height of last October's Cuban crisis...

Author: By Richard L. Levine, | Title: Brandeis Loses Two Professors In Speech Fight | 3/26/1963 | See Source »

...Although Sachar has cited concomitant reasons for his dissatisfaction with Mrs. Aberle, it is reported that pressures on her to leave did not begin until after she addressed an audience of students on October 24. At that time, she criticized the American policy towards Cuba and said "I also hope that if there is a limited war Cuba will win and the U.S. will he shamed before all the world and her imperialistic hegemony in Latin America will be ended forever...

Author: By Richard L. Levine, | Title: Brandeis Loses Two Professors In Speech Fight | 3/26/1963 | See Source »

...week later, Mrs. Aberle was called into Sachar's office and reprimanded for her "language and manner" in giving the talk; Sachar told her, she reported, that her remarks were "dangerous and reckless." He also criticized the dismissal of one of her classes in order to enable the students to participate in a peace march. Mrs. Aberle has stated that all the students had acquiesced and that the class work was made up later...

Author: By Richard L. Levine, | Title: Brandeis Loses Two Professors In Speech Fight | 3/26/1963 | See Source »

...Sachar's reprimand was accompanied by the information that Mrs. Aberle would not receive tenure; three weeks ago she and her husband resigned. The Brandeis Faculty Senate will meet tomorrow to consider the case...

Author: By Richard L. Levine, | Title: Brandeis Loses Two Professors In Speech Fight | 3/26/1963 | See Source »

...Sachar was a close friend of Mrs. Roosevelt, who had been both a trustee and a lecturer at Brandeis University. "There was never any real brilliance in her speaking," he recalled. "She was not an intellectual force. But hers was the spirit that surmounted nationalism and parochialism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Brandeis President Sachs Lauds Eleanor Roosevelt at Ford Hall | 3/18/1963 | See Source »

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