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An African American woman is speaking at a podium with two microphones in front of her. She is wearing a blouse with a long necklace and glasses.
1969

Angela Davis Lectures in Royce Hall

Professor Angela Davis sparks controversy at UCLA due to her radical political views. Before the Regents could fire her, over Chancellor Young’s protest, her first lecture is moved to Royce Hall to accommodate 2,000 students who wish to attend.
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In 1968, Chancellor Charles E. Young announced a program to hire more underrepresented faculty. One of the recruits was a 25-year-old scholar and outspoken activist from UC San Diego named Angela Davis. Davis joined UCLA’s philosophy department as an acting assistant professor, assigned to teach an introductory course in the fall while she finished her dissertation.

 

Before she taught her first class, the Daily Bruin ran an op-ed that claimed the philosophy department had hired a member of the Communist Party — without naming any names. A week later, the San Francisco Examiner ran a story naming Davis as the subject of the article, and her salary and benefits were withheld.

 

Davis publicly confirmed that she was a member of the Communist Party. However, citing the university’s policies protecting academic freedom — as well as her constitutional rights — she maintained that it had nothing to do with her employment at UCLA, and vowed to fight for her job in court.

 

On September 19, after meeting in an extended executive session, the UC regents officially decided to fire her. Davis responded with a public statement, saying, “The sole reason they give for their intention to fire me is my membership in the Communist Party. They have not questioned my qualifications, my academic training, or my ability to teach.”

 

Davis was reinstated by a California Superior Court judge, and her first lecture, on Oct. 6, 1969, was relocated to Royce Hall to accommodate more than 2,000 students and others who wanted to attend. She went on to teach three courses during the 1969-70 academic year. The regents, with support from by then Governor Ronald Reagan, then fired her again, citing “inflammatory language.” Reagan proclaimed that Davis would never again teach at the University of California.

 

Many in the UCLA community stood with Davis. The Student Legislative Council pushed legislation asking all UCLA professors to withhold grades until Davis’ reinstatement. Faculty raised funds to cover her missed salary and benefits, and a group of professors filed suit against the regents. Chancellor Young took a stand on the issue as well, arguing for academic freedom as he told the regents that he would reappoint Davis. 

 

Davis’ return was halted by a stint in prison on a charge of accessory to murder (she was found not guilty). She went on to study the causes and effects of incarceration, and eventually returned to the University of California as a professor at UC Santa Cruz, where she taught feminist studies and the history of consciousness for more than four decades.

 

Davis’ fight for her job was a flashpoint of a tumultuous era, and an enduring inspiration to generations of others fighting for civil rights, gender equality and academic freedom.