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Henry D. Aiken, professor of Philosophy, has criticized McGeorge Bundy, special Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, for his refusal to "acknowledge a special accountability" to the academic community on the subject of U.S. policy in Vietnam.
In a letter in this week's issue of time magazine, Aiken decried the chilliness and scorn" of a letter written by Bundy--and printed in Time (May 7) Aiken described Bundy as "more rapid than accurate, more facile than In his letter to the Washington University professors, Bundy had doubted that their invitation to him had reflected great credit on its authors as a serious effort to engage in discussion." "I do not understand," Bundy wrote, why a group of academic men, permeably careful students of the historical record, should frame a question about the elections on the premise that the Regarding his obligations to the academic community, Bundy said he had supposed that in public service, "a former businessman was not especially accountable to business circles, a man from labor to the unions, or a professor
Aiken described Bundy as "more rapid than accurate, more facile than In his letter to the Washington University professors, Bundy had doubted that their invitation to him had reflected great credit on its authors as a serious effort to engage in discussion." "I do not understand," Bundy wrote, why a group of academic men, permeably careful students of the historical record, should frame a question about the elections on the premise that the Regarding his obligations to the academic community, Bundy said he had supposed that in public service, "a former businessman was not especially accountable to business circles, a man from labor to the unions, or a professor
In his letter to the Washington University professors, Bundy had doubted that their invitation to him had reflected great credit on its authors as a serious effort to engage in discussion."
"I do not understand," Bundy wrote, why a group of academic men, permeably careful students of the historical record, should frame a question about the elections on the premise that the Regarding his obligations to the academic community, Bundy said he had supposed that in public service, "a former businessman was not especially accountable to business circles, a man from labor to the unions, or a professor
Regarding his obligations to the academic community, Bundy said he had supposed that in public service, "a former businessman was not especially accountable to business circles, a man from labor to the unions, or a professor
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