Regent Moffitt, Vice President Deutsch to Governor Earl Warren, August 16, 1950 August 16, 1950 His EXCELLENCY, EARL WARREN
It seems to us that the question concerning the 40 nonsigners has become a very narrow one, namely: Does the resolution adopted by the Regents on April 21, 1950, provide for a hearing by the Senate Faculty Committee on Privilege and Tenure as an alternative to signing the special letter of acceptance? If it does, surely every Regent would want that alternative to stand in good faith. We suggest that an important key to the answer appears largely to have been overlooked and forgotten. It lies in the recommendations of the Alumni Committee chairmanned by Mr. Bechtel. These recommendations, dated April 19, 1950, were the basis of the Regents' resolution two days later. With that in mind, we invite your attention to the core of the Committee's report. On the second page, the Committee carefully defined the problems it undertook to solve. These are the exact words:
Is it not perfectly clear from the foregoing that the Committee regarded the right of review as a major aspect of the over-all problem? After discussing both of the quoted two-fold problems, and after stating that "the Committee finds almost unanimous opinion among all groups that there should be no departure from right of review by Faculty and President, with right to recommend to Regents", the Alumni Committee proceeds to make, unanimously, its five-point settlement recommendation. The recommendation as to the signing of the new contract of employment (containing the clause that the signer is not a member of the Communist Party, etc.) reads as follows:
Now if the recommendation of the Alumni Committee was, as some claim, that signing the new contract of employment be the only means of obtaining re-employment, it is simply incredible to us that the word "invited" should have been used. It would have been so easy to use the word "required" or otherwise to make it clear, if such was the recommendation of the Alumni Committee, that "no special contract, no job". But, of course, that was not the recommendation of the Committee, as can be seen from the fifth recommendation, which reads as follows:
Do not these perfectly plain words make it crystal clear that the Alumni Committee held out to non-signers the honorable alternative of petition and review? And since the Regents' resolution was intended to carry out that compromise, is it not incumbent upon the Regents, as a matter of good faith, to honor the recommendations of the President of the University and of the Committee on Privilege and Tenure, unless the Regents, as to any particular individual recommended for reappointment, have some genuine basis for denying reappointment on the ground that that individual is a Communist or Communist sympathizer or otherwise unfit to teach? We respectfully urge upon you that the question now is no more than one of good faith in honoring the provisions governing the settlement of the oath controversy. In fact, we wonder if the question now before you may not be even narrower. A majority of the Regents at the last meeting acted to approve the recommendations of the President in regard to the 40 non-signers. Surely this action, so well justified by the facts, should not now be repudiated. Yours for the University, cc: Dr. Robert Gordon Sproul, Source: To Bring You the Facts, pamphlet privately printed and distributed by eighteen alumni of the Berkeley campus, August 17, 1950. |

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