News

Cambridge Residents Slam Council Proposal to Delay Bike Lane Construction

News

‘Gender-Affirming Slay Fest’: Harvard College QSA Hosts Annual Queer Prom

News

‘Not Being Nerds’: Harvard Students Dance to Tinashe at Yardfest

News

Wrongful Death Trial Against CAMHS Employee Over 2015 Student Suicide To Begin Tuesday

News

Cornel West, Harvard Affiliates Call for University to Divest from ‘Israeli Apartheid’ at Rally

Only 68 Professors Sign Open Letter to Kissinger

By M. DAVID Landau

Due in pant to faulty distribution, an open antiwar letter to Henry Kissinger was sent to Washington yesterday with only 68 Faculty signatures.

The two sponsors of the letter-Herbert C. Kelman, Cabot Professor of Social Ethics, and Everett I. Mendelsohn, professor of the History of Science-had intended to circulate the letter to all 780 Faculty members. They asked for a response by last Friday.

But Mendelsohn said last night that he thought a mistake had been made in the mass mailing of the letter and that only half the Faculty had received a copy of it. Several professors contacted last night said they had not seen it.

The letter denounces the continuation of the Vietnam war as immoral and destructive and calls on Kissinger to resign his post as national security advisor if he cannot move to end it. The signatures were released to the press yesterday, and the text-obtained from another Faculty source-was printed in last Thursday's CRIMSON.

The letter also reaffirms Kissinger's acceptability as a colleague, but its principal concern is with the war.

The open letter represents one of the few instances in which a Faculty group has publicly broached the issue of the war with Kissinger. Aside from one White House meeting last May at whicha group of critical senior Faculty members held an "on-the-record" meeting with him to express their dismay at the Cambodian invasion, other meetings and contacts have been mostly individual and always private.

Kelman said of the number of signatures last night, "It's a respectable number, particularly if you assume that we didn't get it around as much as we wanted. It's a varied list, not a one clique list."

The following faculty members signed the open letter to Henry Kissinger:

James S. Ackerman, professor of Fine Arts; Rudolf Arnheim, professor of the Psychology of Art; Emaque Anderson-Imbert, Thomas Professor of Hispanic, American Literature; Kenneth J. Arrow, professor of Economics; W. B. Berthoff, professor of English; Winslow R. Briggs, professor of Biology; E. Bruce Brooks, assistant professor of Chinese; Thomas E. Cheatham, Jr., professor of Computer Science; George L. Clarke, professor of Biology; John H. Coates, assistant professor of Mathematics; William D. Cochran, assistant clinical professor of Pediatrics; Albert M. Craig, professor of History; A. Dalgarno, professor of Astronomy; Bernard D. Davis, professor of Bacterial Physiology; John T. Edsall, professor of Bio-chemistry; Howard W. Emmons, Aboot and James Lawrence Professor of Engmeeting;

Stephen Gilman, professor of Romance Languages; Roy Glauber, professor of Physics; Natuan Grazer, professor of Education and Social Structure; Peter Goureviten, assistant professor of Government; James R. Higntower, professor of Chinese Literature; Albert O. ??man, ??der Professor of Political Economy; Stanley Hoffman, professor of Government; Waiter Kaiser, professor of Comparative Literature and English; Harry P. Kerr, professor of Public Speaking; Martin Kilson, professor of Government; Davia C. Kmsey, assistant professor of Education; Ernst Kitzinger, Porter University Professor; Klaus-Friedrich Koch, assistant professor of Social Anthropology; Rustam Z. Kothavala, director, Harvard Science Center, lecturer on Geology; Harry Levin, Babbitt Professor of Comparative Literature; Maynard Mack Jr., assistant professor of English; David C. McClelland, professor of Psychology;

Tsu-Lin Mei, associate professor of Chinese; Theodore Morrison, professor of English; Robert Nozick, professor of Philosophy; Joseph S. Nye, Jr., program director of the Center for International Affairs; Gustay F. Papanek, former director of the Development Advisory Service; John R. Pappenheimer, professor of Psychology; E. L. Patullo, director, Center for the Behavioral Sciences; Martin Peretz, assistant professor of Social Studies; Charles P. Price, Preacher to the University; John B. Radner, assistant professor of English; Robert Rosenthal, professor of Social Psychology; Robert A. Rothstein, assistant professor of Slavic Languages and Literature; Zick Rubin, assistant professor of Social Psychology; Samuel Sampson, lecturer in Sociology; T. J. Shankland, assistant professor of Geology; Bert Shapiro, assistant professor of Biology;

B. F. Skinner, professor of Psychology; Krister Stendahl, dean of the Divinity School; Philip Stewart, assistant professor of French; Jack M. Stein, professor of German; Michael J. Tannenbaum, associate professor of Physics; Karl V. Teeter, professor of Linguistics, Department Chairman; James C. Thomson, Jr., lecturer on History; Thomas Von Foerster, assistant professor of Physics; Edward W. Wagner, professor of Korean Studies; Michael Walzer, professor of Government, Chairman of Social Studies; Donald P. Warwick, lecturer in Social Relations; Philip M. Weinstein, assistant professor of English; James D. White, assistant professor of Chemistry; George H. Williams, Hollis Professor of Divinity; Thomas H. Wilson, professor of Physiology; Ronald G. Witt, assistant professor of History; Laurence Wylie, professor of the Civilization of France; Herbert C. Kelman, Cabot Professor of Social Ethics; and Everett I. Mendelsohn, professor of the History of Science.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags