News
Summers Will Not Finish Semester of Teaching as Harvard Investigates Epstein Ties
News
Harvard College Students Report Favoring Divestment from Israel in HUA Survey
News
‘He Should Resign’: Harvard Undergrads Take Hard Line Against Summers Over Epstein Scandal
News
Harvard To Launch New Investigation Into Epstein’s Ties to Summers, Other University Affiliates
News
Harvard Students To Vote on Divestment From Israel in Inaugural HUA Election Survey
The administration of John Kennedy may be remembered only as a brief, interesting, glamorous, and insubstantial moment or it may be that this moment will be remembered us a major one, whose will be sounded again and again," Richard E. Neustadt, professor of Government and director of the Kennedy institute, said last night at the Law School Program.
Neustadt, along with Samuel J. Konefsky professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College, and Hans Morgenthau, Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, spoke on "Kennedy: Man in History."
Praise, But . . .
Their effort was to evaluate the two years and ten months which John Kennedy President in the White House; their decision was one of hesitant praise.
Kennedy brought to his office, Morgan then said, "a freshness, vigor, brilliance of stuffy routine" which continued with the "eight years of The three praised Kennedy's efforts in all rights although Konefsky objected that "there was little of actual boldness is conduct of the civil rights struggle." Foreign Policy Morgenthau praised Kennedy's contribution to the "attempt to create a viable foreign policy in the face of the threat nuclear destruction." He cited Kennedy's "tactical success". In the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 and his "real though cited success in gaining a nuclear test of treaty." But, Neustadt said, any judgment most qualified, since Kennedy's administration "is only a story that might have been."
The three praised Kennedy's efforts in all rights although Konefsky objected that "there was little of actual boldness is conduct of the civil rights struggle."
Foreign Policy
Morgenthau praised Kennedy's contribution to the "attempt to create a viable foreign policy in the face of the threat nuclear destruction." He cited Kennedy's "tactical success". In the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 and his "real though cited success in gaining a nuclear test of treaty."
But, Neustadt said, any judgment most qualified, since Kennedy's administration "is only a story that might have been."
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.