Expanded Timeline:
Events of the Loyalty Oath Controversy and Historical Background
July-August 1949
July 6
Non-Academic Senate academic employees meet and support the Academic
Senate position against the Oath.
Professors Lehman and
Hildebrand meet with six representatives of the faculty who are opposed to
the oath, who agree not to release a letter prepared by several faculty
urging their colleagues not to sign the oath until the Academic Senate can
meet again in September.
July 8
A group of Southern California “non signers” meets for the first time.
The faculty is not united, with various factions disputing motives
and tactics.
July
President Sproul sends formal letters to faculty members presenting the
Regents action of June 24 and asking that the oath be signed and returned
by October 1. Many
faculty members sign. Some
support the Regents, others sign as a practical matter so they can go on
with their teaching and work, and others sign because they have not heard
of further Academic Senate action and assume that the oath represents a
negotiated settlement between faculty and administration.
By the end of the month
it is clear that employment contracts for the coming academic year,
1949-50, are being sent only to those who have signed the oath.
Many faculty consider this a breach of faith by the administration.
Ultimately, after faculty protests, salary checks are issued to
non-signers as well.
August 25
Professor Lehman tells President Sproul that opposition to the oath is
much more extensive than previously anticipated, and the faculty were
antagonized by the withholding of contracts earlier in the summer.
Lehman urges Sproul to ask the Regents to delete the oath before
the Academic Senate can meet in September; he believes the Senate will
oppose the oath, thus making any later action Sproul and the Regents take
towards rescinding the oath seem like a reaction under pressure to the
faculty opponents, not an independent initiative.
By the end of August only
about half the oaths have been signed and returned, confirming the fact
that large numbers of the faculty are concerned about the oath.
Compiled by Steve Finacom |