The stoles, like other outrages at UC Irvine, will pass
JOSEPH N. BELL
I tend to come in on the back end of issues that light up the
Newport-Mesa community. This is due partly to laziness and partly
because I like to soak up the comments on the Forum page to see if
there is anything I can add to the discourse. In the area of living
history, at least, my qualifications can hardly be challenged. And I
think some of that history is relevant to the current debate over the
stoles worn by Muslim students at the recent UC Irvine graduation
ceremonies.
The anger that this issue has raised reminded me instantly of a
similar acrimonious dispute on the watch of UCI Chancellor Dan
Aldrich 40 years ago. That’s when the Board of Governors of the
United Republicans of California passed a resolution that Aldrich was
not fit to be UCI’s chancellor because he “repeatedly demonstrated
his flagrant and complete disregard for decency, morality and
responsibility in the educational community ... and supported,
permitted and protected activities of left-wing organizations on the
UCI campus such as the American Civil Liberties Union and the
Communist Party USA.”
Dozens of letters to the editor in the Pilot in those feverish
days of anti-communism reflected the group’s position. Some of them
-- they were allowed to be unsigned in those days -- attacked Aldrich
personally. He was even booed when he was introduced as a speaker at
a Newport Beach meeting of a philanthropic organization he had long
supported. And the Orange County American Legion sent out a mailing
piece saying that it had “previously recognized un-American
activities on the Irvine campus similar to that which occurred at the
Berkeley campus and, by his own admission, Chancellor Aldrich can
stop this sort of sick propaganda without abridging free speech.”
Aldrich’s sins in the eyes of his critics mostly involved his
application of the 1st Amendment. Three examples will illustrate.
When the San Francisco Mime Troop was booked to appear on campus with
a show entitled “Civil Rights in a Cracker Barrel,” enormous local
pressure was put on Aldrich to cancel their appearance on the grounds
that the California Assembly’s Committee on Un-American Activities
had labeled the group “subversive.” Aldrich found the booking had
been scheduled according to regular campus procedures and refused to
cancel it.
Then there was the matter of a radical speaker named Eldridge
Cleaver who was denied an on-campus podium at Berkeley but was
allowed to speak at UCI. And the case of a graduate student named
Mike Krisman who had been a paratrooper for three years before
returning to school to become UCI student body president and
spokesman for the Students for a Democratic Society.
When Aldrich supported Krisman’s appointment as coordinator of
academic advising, the Orange County Young Republicans were as
outraged as they were a month later when Krisman took a summer job as
one of four young men in Marine uniforms in a living re-creation of
the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima for the Pageant of the Masters in
Laguna Beach.
There were other similar incidents, but these three illustrate the
nature of the heat directed at Dan Aldrich. I was teaching at UCI at
the time and hearing these charges with the same incredulity as the
rest of the faculty. (I’ll leave the mindless inclusion of the ACLU
in the same context with the Communist Party to another column.) To
all of us -- at least in my experience -- who served under him, Dan
Aldrich personified practically all of the virtues allegedly most
dear to his critics. He was an imposing man physically who excelled
at athletics, was a registered Republican, wore his patriotism
proudly and had a prestigious background in agriculture. He also had
a vigorous, outgoing family and was straightforward enough to connect
with Orange Countians who regarded incipient intellectualism with
dark suspicion and erudite enough to mingle with equal facility with
scholars.
I observed those qualities on campus and in the community
throughout the troubled Vietnam years, and I believe that Dan Aldrich
was quite possibly the only educator of stature in the state of
California who could have run UCI even-handedly and kept the peace
with Orange County as long as he did.
Because the county has diversified considerably since the Mime
Troop flap, dealing with such intense heat is no longer a condition
of employment for the UCI chancellor. But the principles that guided
Dan Aldrich have also guided succeeding chancellors, as they did in
the matter of the Muslim stoles.
Two quotes I ran across in digging through my files on this period
seem to me especially enlightening in weighing the propriety of this
decision.
The first came from then-UCI Social Science Dean James March --
long since awarded a chair at Stanford. He wrote: “By ancient and
mostly honorable traditions, members of the university community are
officially and deliberately protected from major economic or social
retaliation for unpopular views. This frequently places parts of the
university community at odds with the main body of feelings in the
larger community, state and nation. These traditions are some of the
major attributes of a serious university. The occasional deviant
faculty member or student or other members of the community tests a
university’s willingness to conserve its traditions. It hardly
requires much foresight to predict future opportunities at UCI for
meeting new challenges of a similar sort.”
The second is extracted from an opinion of U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Louis Brandeis in a 1st Amendment case. He wrote: “To justify
suppression of free speech there must be reasonable ground to fear
that serious evil will result if free speech is practiced.... If
there be time to expose through discussion the falsehood and
fallacies to avert the evil by the process of education, the remedy
to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.”
These are complex issues in which sound principles sometimes
contest for priority. But Muslim stoles -- like the Mime Troop --
will also pass.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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