News
Garber Privately Tells Faculty That Harvard Must Rethink Messaging After GOP Victory
News
Cambridge Assistant City Manager to Lead Harvard’s Campus Planning
News
Despite Defunding Threats, Harvard President Praises Former Student Tapped by Trump to Lead NIH
News
Person Found Dead in Allston Apartment After Hours-Long Barricade
News
‘I Am Really Sorry’: Khurana Apologizes for International Student Winter Housing Denials
To the Editors of the CRIMSON:
Mr. Hessler's article in your March 24 issue begins with a verse or song that contains the following lines:
You either are a freedom fighter
Or a "tom" for Sheriff Clark.
It is likely that these lines were simply reported rather than endorsed. In any case, they express a most unjust assertion which would not be made so confidently by any but the young of any race.
Is it fair to call a man a "tom" because he is, say, a sixty-year-old Negro who is obliged to earn a living in Alabama? Many Negro men and women, born too early in the South, are in such a position. No Northerner, white or black, has the right to level such an epithet at these people, or even to give it ambiguous approval, after returning to his own state. Moreover, it is doubtful that an Alabama Negro of twenty has the right to level it at one of sixty-five.
A person's age, like his race, is something that he cannot choose. Need the supporters of the civil rights movement assume, with the general, that every war must have its casualties? Shall we then take it upon ourselves to designate these unfortunates? Can we be sure that such an attitude and action would be fair, let alone consistent with the ambitious morality of principle? Alan J. Berman GSAS
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.