Web Exclusives:
Under the Ivy
a column by Jane Martin paw@princeton.edu
May 10, 2006:
An
outbreak of ‘Hiss-teria’
Tigers roared when Whig-Clio invited Alger
Hiss to speak
Fifty years ago, spring fever of a sort
hit Princeton’s campus: a furious debate over the propriety of Whig-Clio’s
invitation to Alger Hiss to speak on campus.
Hiss, a state department official who had
accompanied President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to the historic
World War II conference in Yalta in 1945, later had been accused
of being a Soviet spy and convicted of perjury in a 1949 trial.
He would proclaim his innocence until his death in 1996 but in 1956,
with anti-Communist feelings and Cold War fears running high, his
very name aroused strong emotions.
When Hiss accepted Whig-Clio’s offer to
come to campus, an uproar a local paper termed it “Hiss-teria”
broke out. Alumni threatened to cut off their donations and throw
their Whig-Clio medals “into the river” (Nelson B. Gaskill 1896).
“I am disgusted,” wrote George C. Warner Jr. ’22, and University
Press director Herbert Bailey ’42 penned an elegant letter to Whig-Clio
president Bruce Bringgold ’57 reminding him of his responsibility
“to live up to the University’s trust.” “How can you get any truth
from a convicted liar?” asked Harold Erdman ’46. Dwight Marvin 1901
echoed him: “Doesn’t this go over the boundary of decency?” This
“would not have occurred in the days when Moses Taylor Pyne and
people of his caliber were on the Board of Trustees,” opined Bernard
Peyton ’17, while C. E. Whitehouse ’15 summed things up starkly:
“Frankly, it stinks.”
Fittingly, there were plenty of voices
for the opposition as well. “It is with great pride that I read
of what might be called ‘The Hiss Invitation,’ ” declared Peter
Fleming ’51, while his compatriot, Ira Pressman ’54, “put pen to
paper to express my 100 percent approval of the action of the members
of WhigClio … the object of education should not be to ‘learn’
a one-dimensional set of values, but it should be to gain understanding
and comprehension.” Even those opposed to Hiss’ appearance acknowledged
his right to speak: “Freedom of speech is, of course, one of the
fundamental principles under which we live,” wrote T.B. Fisher ’46,
though he wondered why Princeton need be Hiss’ “sounding board.”
The
Princeton administration under President Harold Dodds did not insist
that Whig-Clio retract its invitation, but it did express its disapproval
of the selection. Dodds told PAW: “We have sought to resolve this
problem not in terms of ‘academic’ freedom but in the deeper and
more subtle terms of human freedom …. One important element in education
for human freedom is the freedom to make mistakes, and to learn
to accept responsibility for them. … To the [Whig-Clio] officers
I have made known my own contempt for Hiss’ record. Although undergraduates
are curious about this man, their attitude is distinctly not one
of admiration. … [But] to listen to a man, they feel, implies no
endorsement by the listeners of the man, or his ideas, or his record.”
This middle-of-the-road approach generally
received approval from all sides, with alumni acknowledging that
it would be bad form to ban the speaker and the Prince running
an editorial that concluded: “If Hiss appears here, many will feel
that Princeton is defending a perjurer at least, a traitor at worst.
If the bid is retracted, even more will feel that Princeton is a
university without the courage of her convictions. We must choose
the lesser of two evils.”
In
the end, the debate over Hiss’ appearance proved far more educational
than his actual speech. His 22-minute, April 26th lecture to 200
students was described in a single paragraph item in PAW’s news
section as “vague and platitudinous.” Disappointed reporters vied
for clever ways to say “boring,” with the Newark Evening News
offering, “If Hiss were a professor, his class might be voted ‘most
likely to be cut.’ ”
In more extensive coverage in his On the
Campus column, Dick Atcheson ’56 echoed the professionals, describing
the Hiss speech as “so commonplace a survey of the results of the
Geneva Conference that it is about as memorable as an 8:40 freshman
politics lecture.” Placing the brouhaha in perspective, Atcheson
wrote that as he left the scene that night, “The bell in Old North
was quietly tolling the midnight hour, and lights were blinking
out in the big black dorms all along my route to Nassau Street.
The campus was very still, and there was a very solid air of permanence
about the place. I reflected then that it will take much more than
a pack of newsmen, or a score of faithless alumni, or a pitifully
foggy pariah like Alger Hiss, to bring Princeton to its ‘darkest
hour.’ ”
Jane Martin 89 is PAW's former editor-in-chief. You can
reach her at paw@princeton.edu
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