12 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, April 11, 1997 ,; X, J, 1 -4 'I ONG THE ZE AND BLU When the Red Scare began to target academia in the 1950s, several University professors were among those who fought powerful figures and accusations for their poltical independence - and their jobs. By Janet Adamy Daily Staff Reporter While former mathematics instructor Chandler Davis filled his students' minds with variables and equations in the early 1950s, the University was trying to fire him for his alleged affiliation with the Communist Party. Not long before the student protests of the 1960s gave the University its liberal reputation, the Ann Arbor campus was not a bastion of free speech. Davis, an instructor at the University in 1953, remembers when the national wave of McCarthyism began to affect students and facul- ty. "On occasion, the University would refuse to give permission to let speakers speak on campus because they were too radical," Davis said, recalling that in 1950, leftist speaker Herbert Phillips spoke in a local book store because the University would not give him permission to speak on campus. Three years later, Sen. Joseph McCarthy's cru- sade against communism hit the University with full force and resulted in the investigation of three instructors - Davis, former tenured pharmacolo- gy Prof. Mark Nickerson and former zoology Prof. Clement Markert. About 40 years later, in an effort to keep the event fresh in the minds of students and faculty, the Senate Assembly established an annual lec- tureship in honor of the three instructors who were interrogated during the anti-Communist investiga- tion. Last month celebrated the seventh annual Davis, Markert, Nickerson Lecture on Academic and Intellectual Freedom. Each year, the guest speakers address issues of academic freedom in higher education today. The era of McCarthyism Often called the "Red-Hunt" or "Red Scare," the national search for Communists began in the late l 1940s and peaked in the early 1950s. 1947 HUAC he Under McCarthy's l direction, the HouseN Subcommittee on No v First subp U n A e r1 ca nto Prof M Un-American trfM Activities (H UAC) ' 'May Instructor subpoenaed 1954 graduate American citizens questione suspected of associ- of HUAC; ating with the ws pendt Communist Party. Wy°instructor The committee's graduate questioning and Aug 3 Chandler investigation led to 1954 letter from the firings and j his dismis imprisonment of L hundreds of LCate ug Dav Ni Americans. ";beforeH As Communist faculty c investigations maderesa their way into the Aug 26 Universit government and the 1954 vote to fir entertainment indus- Nickerso try, University histo- Spring Regents o ry Prof. Nicholas 1990 to acknow Steneck said it is not surprising that they Fall Davis, M seeped into higher 199 lecture or sepe ntellectua education. restablishe "There was a deepr concern about theT influence of commu- nism on education at all levels," Steneck. said. "If you're con- cerned that Communists are influencing the country, the first place you are going to look is the government and then you're going to look to education. "(The University of Michigan) is a prominent University and we were looked to as a result (of that)," Steneck said. The allegations made their way to the University in the fall of 1953 when former University Vice President and Dean of Faculties Marvin Niehuss was notified by HUAC that more than half a dozen University faculty members were going to be subpoenaed to testify before the committee. Steneck said Niehuss traveled to Washington to negotiate with the committee to reduce the num- ber of faculty subpoenaed. "I told the FBI that I would cooperate with them ifkc,- hA ,n nv"eiAnce- but I certainlu didn't unt Myron Sharpe. The five were questioned by U.S. Sen. Kit Clardy (R-Mich.) and other members of the com- mittee in May 1954. Markert, Nickerson, Sharpe and Shaffer all refused to answer questions about their political activity, pleading the Fifth Amendment, which pro- tects individuals from testifying against themselves. "I didn't want to talk about anything substan- tive before the Clardy committee because, in my view, the government is mine, represents me and has no right to ask me about my political opinions or actions, so I refused categorically to answer any of their questions, pleading the Fifth Amendment," Markert said in the 1988 video- taped interview with Kulakow. Davis, taking a unique and somewhat risky stand, refused to answer questions about his polit- ical activity, claiming it was a violation of his First Amendment rights. "My reason for not answering is not because of a blemish in my past," Davis told The Michigan Daily in 1953. "Not the answers, but the questions and the way they were asked were at fault." Ellen Schrecker, a history professor at Yeshiva University in New York and the author of "No Ivory Tower: McCarthyism and the University," said many people thought that pleading the Fifth Amendment was a "safer" option for an answer because it often protected a person from being asked to name other people who were involved in the same activities. Schrecker used the University's situation as the central focus of her book. "By 1950, most of the citizens who didn't want to cooperate with the committee used the Fifth," Schrecker said. Schrecker said that between 1953 and 1954, people began to rethink what they were doing in. front of the government committee, and some arings begin. oena sent ark Nickerson. s and two students d by members former University Harlan Hatcher sthe three s and releases the students. Davis receives Hatcher requesting sal. ckerson, and Prof. Market appear atcher's "ad-hoc" 'mmittee; Hatcher s Markert. y Board of Regents e both Davis and yn. verlook recommendations /ledge the firings. arkert, Nickerson Academic and al Freedom ed. refused to answer the questions under protection of the First Amendment. Schrecker said Davis was fully aware that pleading the First Amendment was risky because there was a greater chance of being found in contempt of Congress. "He knew that "he was risking jail ... he did it very consciously to become a test case," she said. Shortly after the hear- ings, then-University President Harlan Hatcher issued a statement that called for the immediate suspension of the three instructors "without loss of pay from all duties and connections to the University." "If you take such an amendment, you say to the public there is some reason why you have to do this, and that leaves the University with the ques- tion 'Do you ignore this or do you take notice with that,"' Hatcher said in the 1988 videotaped interview with Kulakow. "In the pro- cedure that we had, this was something that we simply could not ignore." ing examples such as Hatcher's close relationship with the Eisenhower admin- istration and his strong support of military research. Davis said the faculty treated him well during the hearings and after the suspension. "There was nobody who tried to ostracize me or Markert as nasty Reds," Davis said. "People were nice to us and the press was pretty reason- able." Reaction on campus Although there were no massive student protests against the suspensions, Shaffer said he doesn't remember feeling unsupported by stu- dents. "We generally had good support from the stu- dents," Shaffer said. However, on May 20, 1954, the University's Student Legislature voted down a motion con- demning the faculty suspensions, History Prof. Sidney Fine said he remembers the campus being "pretty tame" at that time. "The faculty may have been upset, but there was little in the way of student protest that I can recall," Fine said. Davis agreed that the campus was "relatively silent." "It was somewhat liberal, it's just that the num- ber of people who were politically active was very small," Davis said. "The reason was because everyone knew the ax was going to fall." Davis said that a group of students protested the suspension in the spring of 1954, but that the end of the school year diverted student attention away from' the suspensions. The aftermath Hatcher, claiming the professors had raised seri- ous doubts concerning their ability to serve as instructors by refusing to answer questions regard- ing their political activity, created an ad-hoc com- mittee composed of University faculty to conduct University hearings of the three suspended instruc- tors. In early August 1954, prior to the hearings, Hatcher sent Davis a letter stating his intentions to remove the instructor from the University. Shortly after receiving the letter, Davis was indicted by the federal government for contempt of Congress. During the ad-hoc committee investigations in mid-August, Davis refused to answer questions about his political history, while Markert and Nickerson discussed their political involvement. "I discussed things about my lecturing and about my teaching and so forth and they didn't want to hear about them," Davis said. "They just wanted to know if I was a Red." The committee recommended that the University fire Davis and retain Markert and Nickerson, "The committee was somewhat reassured with their answers and they were quite angry with me," Davis said. But Hatcher, with the urgings of then-pharma- cology chair Maurice Seevers, decided to send both Davis and Nickerson before the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee's Subcommittee on Intellectual Freedom and Integrity. Hatcher ended Markert's suspension and Markert returned to the classroom the next fall. The subcommittee voted to fire Davis and retain Nickerson. Once again, at the recommendation of Seevers, Hatcher decided to fire both Davis and Nickerson, pending approval by the University's Board of Regents. The case went before the board at the end of August. The regents voted in agreement with Hatcher, and both Davis and Nickerson were fired from their positions at the University. Davis unsuccessfully appealed the federal case and in 1960 spent six months in a federal correc- tion institute in Connecticut for con- tempt of Congress. Davis said he was unofficially blacklist- ed in the United States and was unable to find a per- manent job in high- er education. He later moved to Canada where he Mathematical Society. Nickerson also moved to Canada, where he has taught and served as president of the Pharmacological Society of Canada and the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. Markert left the University and accepted an offer to teach at Johns Hopkins University. Schrecker said Markert's case was very rare. "Usually someone who took the Fifth and did- n't have tenure was let go," Schrecker said, noting that Markert was most likely retained because he had strong support from his department and was academically respected. "It's possible that the administration realized that there would be trou- ble if he were let go." Remembering The University's involvement in the Red Scare was recalled in 1989 when the University of Michigan Chapter of the American Association of University Professors endorsed a statement requesting a significant gesture of reconciliation for the three professors. The Senate Assembly endorsed it and presented it to the regents in the spring of 1990. Davis said the senate proposed a weak agenda so the regents would "just think about it and that's all." Although it was put on the regent's agenda, the senate's proposal never made it to the table. Former University Regent Thomas Roach said the proposal might have been recognized had it been raised in a different context. "It really was the faculty who made the deci- sion (in 1954)," Roach said."The idea in 1990 that this was something that the regents had done (then) ... was completely contrary to the facts." In 1990, the Senate Assembly established the Markert, Davis, Nickerson Lecture on Academic Freedom and Intellectual Freedom in honor of the three professors. Steneck said he thinks the lecture series is an appropriate way to honor the professors. "It isn't easy to decide what the correct course of action is regarding academic freedom when sensitive issues were involved," Steneck said. Hatcher said he does not believe the University owes the professors an apology and he wouldn't change anything about how the University han- dled the investigations. "We had a complete line of actions set out for this thing by the American Association of University Professors and I followed their program along with the regents' approval," Hatcher said. Davis said he does not regret his actions during any of the hearings. "I think it's rather ironic that these committees of my senior faculty members found me unfit to belong to their community on the basis that I might ... not be a friend of free speech because' what they were essentially saying was that we will suppress you on the hypothesis that some other time ... you might suppress someone else," Davis said. "In other words, they were convicting me of doing, essentially, what they were doing them- selves at that moment." Kaplan still contends that the whole investiga- tion was completely improper and that the lecture series only serves as a substitute for an apology. "We keep hoping that the regents will someday change their mind and (apologize)," Kaplan said. "The purpose (of the lecture) is to keep it fresh in people's mind, but that doesn't solve it." 0i Division of colleagues Although the majority of the faculty kept their opinions of the suspensions to themselves, those who were vocal were divided on the issue. Shortly after the suspensions, more than'200 University faculty members put their names on a paid advertisement in the Daily that stated their belief that "competence should be the criterion for .. evaluating personnel, and that personal beliefs, unless they are demonstrated to interfere with a man's ability to teach objectively, should not enter the evaluation." Mathematics Prof. Emertis Wilfred Kaplan said the faculty was very sharply divided, citing that the majority of faculty members in the Literary College were opposed to the suspensions while those in the Srhon lf Medicine g'enerallv sunnorted them. 0 11 i 5 L'. ,'.