By Julian Delasantellis
Sometimes attributed to the early 20th-century Harvard University president, A Lawrence Lowell, is the quote, "There's a Harvard man on the wrong side of every question." He ought to have known, coming down on the bonehead side of a number of noted issues.
In 1916, Lowell opposed president Woodrow Wilson's nomination of Louis Brandeis to the Supreme Court, wrongfully accusing the noted jurist of being a Zionist zealot. In 1926, appointed by the Massachusetts governor to lead a fact-finding commission in the matter of Sacco and Vanzetti, two Italian communist immigrant laborers charged with a murder of an armored car guard, Lowell displayed none of the doubt coursing through the community about the fairness of the convictions to enthusiastically recommend their eventual execution.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
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