In the hectic days following
World War II, the Harvard Law School Forum was founded by thirty
returning soldiers as a memorial to their fellow students who died
in the war. Recognizing that civic responsibility required an awareness
of current political, social, and economic issues, the Forum dedicated
itself to inviting noteworthy individuals from all fields of endeavor
to the Harvard Law School. It was hoped that the presentation of
a broad range of current ideas would better prepare the Harvard
community to solve the important problems of the future.
On March 8, 1946, the Forum presented its first program, a discussion
of the war crimes trials. Forum programs were soon being given regular
radio coverage. In 1948, the Forum was charted as a nonprofit corporation.
Since its founding, the Forum has shown a proclivity for political
prediction. It presented talks by a freshman congressman named John
Kennedy, by an interim Senate appointee named John Foster Dulles,
by a rising Minnesota politician named Hubert Humphrey, and also
by a relatively unknown Georgia governor named Jimmy Carter.
The Forum has also shown an uncanny ability to select and attract
persons intimately involved in the resolution of international conflicts.
In 1952, Abba Eban speculated on the future of Israel. In 1959,
Fidel Castro addressed a Soldiers Field crowd only three months
after his rise to power in Cuba. In 1987, Nobel Peace Prize winner
Oscar Arias described his plan for peace in Central America. In
1984, Nicaraguan leader Daniel Ortega defended the Sandanista revolution.
Six months later, Arturo Cruz of the Contras voiced his opposition
to it.
The roster of Forum speakers reads like a volume of Who's
Who in the World. In addition to the indivudals already mentioned
here, B.K. Nehru, Margaret Mead, Donald T. Regan, Jimmy Hoffa, Strom
Thurmond, Michael S. Dukakis, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Thurgood Marshall,
David Brinkley, Ed Koch, Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Edward Kennedy, Marion
Barry, Tom Wicker, William F. Buckley, Mike Wallace, Henry Kissinger,
Scott Turow, John Cardinal O'Connor, Betty Friedan, Melvin Belli,
John Cleese, Carl Sagan, and Elizabeth Dole have visited the Harvard
Law School Forum. So have over four hundred others.
An invitation declined can be as famous as one accepted. In 1960,
the Forum invited Nikita Khruschev to speak while he was visiting
the United States as head of the Soviet U.N. delegation. In an eight-page
telegram, he declined because of travel restrictions. In his reply,
which was reprinted three days later in the New York Times,
he declared: "I am confident, however, that better times will
come in the relations between our countries."
The Forum today is much like it was when it was founded. It remains
a nonprofit organization run entirely by students with financial
support from the legal and business communities. It offers an active
and varied program of speakers and panel discussions, all of which
are open to the public and receive extensive local and national
media attention. The Forum does not pay honoraria to speakers, nor
does it endorse their views, yet it has been able to present intriguing
discussions of many important current issues to the Harvard and
Boston communities.
Forum programs are held at Harvard Law School in the Ames Courtroom
in historic Austin Hall. Adequate security is provided for our speakers
and our guests. |