Descriptive Summary |
|
Creator: | Rutgers University. Office of the President |
Title: | Inventory to the Records of the Office of the President (Lewis Webster Jones). Group II, Academic Freedom Cases |
Dates: | 1942-1958 |
Quantity: | 1.6 cubic ft. (4 manuscript boxes) |
Abstract: | The records of the Academic Freedom series created in the Office of Rutgers president Lewis Webster Jones consists of four manuscript boxes of documents that span from 1942-1958. The earliest records document the professional histories of Professors Heimlich, Finley, and Glasser, and the latest documents concern the Board of Governors dealing with censure by the AAUP and AALS. The bulk of the material is from 1952-1953, documenting the procedures of the University in evaluation of the cases and dismissal or resignation of the professors. The records are arranged into two series. |
Collection No. ; | RG 04/A15/02 |
Language | English. |
Repository: | Rutgers University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives |
Academic Freedom Cases series of the records of Rutgers University President Lewis Webster Jones (1952-1956) documents the cases at Rutgers emanating from the search of Congressional The Committees for subversives in academia, meaning those who were members of or sympathetic to the Communist Party, during the McCarthy Era of the early 1950s. Three professors at Rutgers were dismissed or forced to resign after invoking the fifth amendment in refusing to answer questions concerning their possible Communist Party membership or affiliation. The faculty members were Simon W. Heimlich, Associate Professor of Physics and Mathematics, College of Pharmacy in Newark, and Moses I. Finley, Assistant Professor of History, Newark College of Arts and Sciences, both of whom were called to testify before the Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security (also known as the McCarran Committee), and Abraham Glasser, Associate Professor of Law, Rutgers School of Law in Newark, who was called to testify before the House of Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities (also known as the Velde Committee and HUAC ). The records of the series span from 1942-1958, with the pre-1950s materials relating to the professors' professional histories and the roots of the Congressional Subcommittees allegations against them. Reasons for Heimlich, Finley, and Glasser's refusals to testify included fear of perjury conviction, an unwillingness to incriminate others, and opposition to what they believed was a grave invasion of privacy.
At the time, Rutgers lacked a clear mechanism, as did colleges and universities nationwide, for handling a case of this nature, and President Jones and the University as a whole were under a great deal of pressure, particularly in the conservative climate of the times, to prevent any Communist infiltration of academia, whether real or supposed. The procedure was carried out through a number of Committees of Review, and ultimately through decisions of the Board of Trustees, the governing body of the University at the time. On September 26, 1952, following Heimlich and Finley's appearances before the Senate Subcommittee, Jones announced that he would appoint a Trustee-Faculty-Alumni Committee to review these two cases and advise him on further action. Tracy S. Voorhees, one of the Trustees, was appointed chairman. At this time Jones stated his belief that we cannot "allow academic freedom to be used as a cloak for incompetence; nor can we tolerate conspirators who claim its protection in order to destroy freedom." After reviewing the cases, the Committee presented a report to President Jones stating that the refusal of Heimlich and Finley to answer certain questions before the Senate Subcommittee raises "a real question as to their fitness to continue as teachers on the University faculty", and recommended review of the cases by a Special Faculty Committee. The University's Committee on Committees then met and recommended membership of a Faculty Committee, which would act as an advisory body to the Trustees. Dr. Bennett M. Rich, Associate Professor of Political Science, was named as chairman.
On December 3, 1952, the Special Faculty Committee issued a report stating there should be no charges against Heimlich or Finley and that the University should take no further action in the matter. However, the Trustees, who had final say in the matter, issued a resolution on December 12, 1952, stating "it shall be cause for immediate dismissal of any member of faculty or staff" who invokes the fifth amendment before an investigatory body in refusing to answer questions relating to Communist affiliation, and that Professors Heimlich and Finley would be dismissed as of December of 31, 1952 unless they conformed to this new policy. Neither chose to do so. There was protest to this decision by members of the faculty, who formed an Emergency Committee on the matter.
On March 19, 1953, Glasser was suspended by Jones following his appearance before HUAC, and the following month the case was referred to the Faculty Committee of Review of the Law School of Rutgers for "hearing, consideration, and recommendation to the Board of Trustees", as stated by President Jones, April 29, 1953. This Committee later issued a report , in response to questions which had been specifically asked by Jones, finding that Glasser had violated the policy of Board of Trustees in regard to use of the fifth amendment, and that no unusual circumstances mitigated this violation. Several weeks later Glasser submitted his resignation, which the Trustees accepted.
All three Professors believed, and the Special Faculty Committee of Review argued in its report, that they had been exercising a constitutional right, that their fitness as teachers had not been impaired in any way, and that they were currently being denied legal due process by the University. These beliefs were in marked contrast to Jones' view on the matter (which also embodied the view of the Trustees) in his January 1953 statement on "Academic Freedom and Civic Responsibility," which was issued in pamphlet form and was widely requested by administrators of colleges and universities from around the nation, who were struggling to create statements of their own on academic freedom. Jones argued that it was not the legal right to invoke the fifth which was in dispute, but the moral implications of using it, which reflects badly on the professors' obligations as teachers and as representatives of the University. He continued that the nature of the Communist Party is antithetical to academic freedom.
In accordance with the climate of the times, many agreed with Jones' view, often surpassing it in extremity, and exerted strong pressure for dismissal. These included the governor of New Jersey at the time, Alfred E. Driscoll, the media, which printed countless editorials condemning the professors in question, and the public, particularly alumni of the University.
As a consequence of the its policies, Rutgers University was censured by both the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) in 1956, and the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) in 1958. The censures were prompted by the University's policy of automatic dismissal, and failure to observe standards of academic due process. University policies on academic freedom and tenure were revised under the Board of Governors, a new governing body of Rutgers which went into effect September 1, 1956, following a statutory reorganization of the university, after which the AAUP censure was lifted. The AALS requested a rehearing for Glasser, which the Board of Governors denied, stating that although they did not necessarily agree with the decisions of the Board of Trustees, neither did they wish to judge them.
The records of the Academic Freedom series of the Lewis Webster Jones Papers consists of 4 manuscript boxes which span from 1942-1958. The earliest records document the professional histories of Heimlich, Finley, and Glasser, and the latest documents concern the Board of Governors dealing with censure by the AAUP and AALS. The bulk of the material is from 1952- 1953, documenting the procedures of the University in evaluation of the cases and dismissal or resignation of the professors. The papers of the series are arranged into two subseries.
Records documenting University procedures and findings in the cases are included in the University Documents subseries (1952-1957). At the time the University had no existing mechanism to deal with the question of possible Communist affiliation of its staff or administration and the validity of invoking the fifth amendment in refusal to answer questions of this nature; Consequently, a number of Committees were appointed by President Jones to serve in an advisory capacity to himself and the Board of Trustees, after which the Trustees made the final decision of whether to dismiss. The University was under severe pressure from both the government and private citizens to take action, and in doing so it became something of a model for other colleges and universities facing the same dilemma. Documentation on the investigations of the University Committees and decisions of President Jones and the Board of Trustees include Jones' statements of September 26, 1952 and October 14, 1952 announcing creation of the university committees, and his January 1953 Statement on Academic Freedom and Civic Responsibility, reports of the Trustees-Alumni-Faculty Committee of Review, the Special Faculty Committee of Review, and the Faculty Committee of Review of the Law School, and the December 12, 1952 resolution of the Board of Trustees announcing automatic dismissal for using the fifth amendment in refusal to answer questions on Communist affiliation. Documentation on the University's censure by AAUP and AALS includes a report of a Special Committee of the AAUP regarding the effects of Congressional investigations upon academic freedom and tenure, a letter from Henry. R. Brandis, Jr., Chairman of the 1956 Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure of the AALS, enclosed with it the Committee's Annual report regarding its review of the Glasser case, a resolution of the AALS requesting a rehearing of the case as Rutgers, and correspondence from the AAUP and AALS regarding censure.
The Subject Files subseries (1942, 1946-1958) documents public and private sentiment towards the cases and includes materials on Heimlich, Finley, and Glasser's professional histories and the roots of Communist allegations against them. Documentation includes communications both pro and anti dismissal from private citizens, Rutgers alumni, past and present students of the professors, and then Governor of New Jersey Alfred E. Driscoll; photostatic materials of Heimlich and Finley including their resumes and transcripts of testimony before the Senate Subcommittee on Internal Security; in the case of Finley, confidential correspondence to Dean Herbert P. Woodward of the College of Arts and Sciences in Newark refuting accusations of Communist activity; the dismissal of alleged Communist Myron L. Hoch, part-time professor of Economics at Rutgers; and a letter to the Harvard Crimson by Professors Sutherland and Chaffee. Also included are newspaper clippings of the cases, consisting largely of editorials condemning the Professors; included with the clippings is a release of the University Office of Public Relations analyzing newspaper editorials on the Heimlich-Finley cases.
Documents of the Academic Freedom Cases series are divided into two series:
In the first subseries, for the researcher's convenience, in addition to official procedural documentation of the cases, materials closely related to a specific incident, such as correspondence in reaction to it, are included .
Records in the series arrived in folders, nearly all of which were labelled. All of the documents were refoldered and all original suitable labels were retained. Though original folder groupings of materials were retained, a number of folders were rearranged to present the chronology of the cases.
There were numerous duplicate copies of many university documents, for each of which one duplicate was retained and the rest discarded. All other materials were retained.
I. University Documents, 1952-1957 (22 folders) | |||||||||||
Arrangement: chronological | |||||||||||
Summary: Documentation of the cases of Heimlich, Finley, and Glasser regarding University procedures in reviewing the cases, dismissal and resignation of the professors, and censure of Rutgers by the AAUP and AALS. Included in the papers are President Jones' statements of September 26, 1952, October 14, 1952, and January 24, 1953, and his January 1953 Statement on Academic Freedom and Civic Responsibility; correspondence relating to the Jones' statement of January 24; Reports to the President and Board of Trustees from the Trustees-Alumni-Faculty Committee of Review, the Special Faculty Committee and the Faculty Committee of the School of Law; the December 12, 1952 resolution of the Board of Trustees, Resolutions passed by the University Assembly regarding the cases; transcripts of Heimlich and Finley before the Senate Subcommittee; correspondence between Jones and Ralph E. Himstead, General Secretary of the AAUP; a report of a Special Committee of the AAUP regarding the effects of Congressional investigations upon academic freedom and tenure; a letter from Henry R. Brandis, Jr., Chairman of the 1956 Committee on Academic Freedom and Tenure of AALS, and enclosed with it the Committee' annual report which included a review of the Glasser case; a resolution of the AALS requesting a rehearing of the case; and documentation and correspondence regarding censure of Rutgers by the AAUP and AALS. Also included is a bound volume of documents relevant to the cases. | |||||||||||
Box | Folder | ||||||||||
1 | 1 | Statement by President Jones and Signed Statement by Heimlich, September 26, 1952 | |||||||||
2 | Trustees-Faculty-Alumni Committee of Review, September-October 1952 | ||||||||||
3 | Statement of Special Committe (Trustee-Alumni-Faculty), October 14, 1952 | ||||||||||
4 | Stenographic Report of Heimlich's Appearance Before Faculty Committee, November 7, 1952 | ||||||||||
5 | Special Faculty Committee of Review Minutes, and Miscellany, December 2, 1952 November-December 1952 | ||||||||||
6 | Special Faculty Committee Report to Dr. Jones, December 3, 1952 | ||||||||||
7 | Board of Trustees Decision of October 12, 1952 | ||||||||||
8 | Resolutions Received Re: Dismissal, December 1952-April 1953 | ||||||||||
9 | Members of Faculty Who Expressed Opinions | ||||||||||
10 | University Assembly Re: Dismissal-Resolutions | ||||||||||
11 | Letters from the Trustees Re: University Assembly and Faculty Committee, December 1952-May 1953 | ||||||||||
12 | Emergency Committee Letter and Statement to Board of Trustees, January 19, 1953 | ||||||||||
13 | Dr. Jones Notes on the Emergency Committee Memorandum | ||||||||||
14 | President's Statement of January 24, 1953 | ||||||||||
15-17 | Comments on Dr. Jones Statement of January 24, 1953 and General Comments, 1953-1957 | ||||||||||
18 | Lists Used For Mailing Copies of Dr. Jones' Statement of January 24, 1953 | ||||||||||
Box | Folder | ||||||||||
2 | 1-2 | Requests for Copies of Dr. Jones' Statement, November 1952-October, 1953 | |||||||||
3 | Glasser, A., Suspension by L.W. Jones, Pres. of Rutgers Univ. and resignation, 1953 | ||||||||||
4-5 | Censure of Rutgers by AALS and AAUP, Heimlich-Finley, and Glasser, 1954-1956 | ||||||||||
6 | Materials sent to Board of Governors, 1952, 1956 | ||||||||||
7 | Bound volume entitled Rutgers University Documents concerning the cases of PROFESSORS HEIMLICH AND FINLEY, 1952-1953 and the April 1953 issue (v.34 no.2) of the Educational Record which includes the article "It Did Happen at Rutgers: Basic Documents Concerning the Case of Two Professors Who Refused to Answer Questions Asked by Internal Security Subcommittee" |
II. Subject Files, 1947-1958 (21 folders) | |||||||||||
Arrangement: alphabetically by folder heading. | |||||||||||
Summary: Documentation consists of correspondence and printed materials including communications both pro and anti dismissal from private citizens, Rutgers alumni, past and present students of the professors, New Jersey Governor Alfred E. Driscoll, and Rutgers professors; correspondence of and regarding Heimlich and Finley, including correspondence of President Jones and then Provost Mason W. Gross regarding locating a position for Finley at another university; photostatic materials of Heimlich and Finley, including documentation of their professional histories at Rutgers and transcripts of testimony before the Senate Subcommittee, and in the case in Finley, confidential documents to University Dean Woodward which refute accusations before Congress by former Communists William Martin Canning and Karl August Wittfogel; documentation on the dismissal of alleged Communist Myron L. Hoch, part-time professor of economics at Rutgers; the letter to the Harvard Crimson by Sutherland and Chaffee; newspaper clippings of the cases, consisting largely of editorials condemning the professors. Included with the clippings is a release by the University Office of Public Relations entitled "An Analysis of Newspaper Editorial Comment on the Heimlich-Finley Cases subsequent to the Board Meeting of January 23-24 and Dr. Jones' Statement of January 24. | |||||||||||
Box | Folder | ||||||||||
2 | 8 | Communications Anti-Dismissal, September 1952-May 1953 (folder 1 of 2) | |||||||||
Box | Folder | ||||||||||
3 | 1 | Communications Anti-Dismissal, September 1952-May 1953 (folder 2 of 2) | |||||||||
2 | Communications Pro-Dismissal, September 1952-March 1953 | ||||||||||
3-4 | Communism-General November 1952-February, 1957 | ||||||||||
5-6 | Correspondence of and regarding Heimlich and Finley, October 1952-April 1953 | ||||||||||
7-9 | Correspondence of and regarding Heimlich and Finley, October 1952-April 1953 | ||||||||||
10 | Expenses | ||||||||||
11 | Faculty Newsletters Re: Academic Freedom, March 1951, November 1951 | ||||||||||
Box | Folder | ||||||||||
4 | 1 | Finley Biographical Data, 1947-1952, 1958 | |||||||||
2 | Finley Photostatic Material, 1948-1952 | ||||||||||
3 | Harvard Letter-Professors Chaffee and Sutherland to The Harvard Crimson, January 7, 8, 1953 | ||||||||||
4 | Heimlich Photostatic Material, 1942, 1946, 1950, 1952 | ||||||||||
5 | Myron L. Hoch, 1953 | ||||||||||
6-7 | Newspaper Accounts of Heimlich-Finley Cases, September-November 1952 | ||||||||||
8 | Photostat Negative (Finley) 1947-1952 |