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January-February 2006
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Open Book |
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| Charles C. Burlingham in New York, 1930. |
| Courtesy of Charles Burlingham Jr. |
In New England they have done it, they do do it, they will do it and they do it in every way in which education can be thought about.
I find education everywhere and in New England it is everywhere, it is thought about everywhere in America everywhere but only in New England is it done as much as it is thought about. And that is saying a very great deal. They do it so much in New England that they even do it more than it is thought about.
The predominantly New England audience, feeling somehow flattered by this modernist talk, smiled, though later one alumnus, in congratulating CCB on his ability to quote Stein “so comprehensibly,” confessed: “I do not feel quite sure what all of it meant, but I expect that is my own stupidity. At any rate, it gave me much pleasure at the time.”
CCB touched lightly on one of the day’s sore topics….Before closing with a general statement about freedom and truth, CCB offered his own opinion:
I see no reason why a good teacher or student should be dropped from the rolls of any college because he is a pacifist, a communist, an atheist, or any other form of “ist,” provided he sticks to his last in the classroom and is a propagandist only extra mures…I have no fear of Fascism in this country, but I confess that I look with some apprehension on the successes of self-styled patriotic societies in putting on the statute book laws…requiring teachers in private as well as public schools to take a loyalty oath.
…The next month the Alumni Bulletin reported, “Throughout the addresses…ran an [undertone] of tension.” But CCB’s handling of the day won praise on all sides, not least because he had spoken forthrightly yet not given offense. Within the university he was now considered a graduate worth consulting, and Harvard officials began to seek his thoughts on troublesome issues.… One problem [Joseph R.] Hamlen [publisher of the Bulletin] took privately to CCB concerned preparations for the university’s tercentenary celebration in September 1936. Former Harvard pres-ident [A. Lawrence] Lowell was refusing to introduce or even sit on the dais with either Governor Curley or President Roosevelt. His reasons had more to do with ego and misunderstanding than politics, and CCB had a part in restoring peace. A disagreement between Conant and the faculty over salaries and retirements threatened to be more divisive, but it, too, was resolved successfully. And in June 1940 the alumni association inaugurated an “Alumni Medal” for service to the university by awarding it to CCB.