David M. Oshinsky, Richard Patrick McCormick, Daniel Horn
The Case of the Nazi Professor

The Case of the Nazi Professor

In 1935, the abrupt dismissal of a German professor at Rutgers University received national attention, arousing the interest of the FBI, ACLU and N.J. state officials, and inciting a university hearing and report. Twenty-six-year-old Lienhard Bergel's contract was terminated, allegedly because of lack of funding, but in fact Bergel's politics clashed with department chair Friedrich J. Hauptmann's pro-Nazi views. Bergel's departure from Rutgers occurred amid a flurry of controversy that polarized students and administrators alike. Alan Silver, who had been a student activist in 1935, republicized the Bergel incident in 1985, prompting this volume. The authors, all Rutgers history faculty, here offer a chronicle of the school as well as re-create the political climate of those earlier times. However, a larger story never emerges from their assembled details. Vital matters, such as freedom of speech, the politics of academia and the activities of student peace groups, are obscured by a long roster of names and dates. Bergel's involvement with the FBI (he gave the agency information on Hauptmann's Nazi activities) is considered only in passing. Hauptmann's collaboration with the Nazis, a fascinating story, and his eventual repatriation during the war to Germany, is told too briefly. Though perhaps a document useful to Rutgers academics, the book is unlikely to command widespread attention. Illustrations not seen by PW.
Sign up to use

This book appears on the shelf Nonfiction

Blood, Sweat, and Pixels
Blood, Sweat, and Pixels by Jason Schreier
The Struggle for Mastery
The Struggle for Mastery by David A. Carpenter
Why Fish Don't Exist
Why Fish Don't Exist by Lulu Miller
A Life on Our Planet
A Life on Our Planet by David Attenborough
Medieval Bodies
Medieval Bodies by Jack Hartnell
Lucy
Lucy by Donald C. Johanson