Walter F. Murphy
Walter Francis Murphy, Jr. (November 21, 1929 – April 20, 2010) was a 20th-century American political scientist and writer.
Biography
Born in Charleston, South Carolina, he won a Distinguished Service Cross for his service as a Marine in Korea, eventually retiring with the rank of colonel. He held the chair of McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton. As a professor, he was undergraduate thesis advisor for Samuel Alito. His professional writing, consisting mostly of non-fiction works on political science, included the classic Constitutional Democracy; he has also written three popular novels, including The Vicar of Christ. Murphy died of cancer, according to his wife, Doris Maher Murphy.
Murphy's name was on the "Selectee List".[1][2]
gollark: What? Macron doesn't have integers.
gollark: At present, there is a significant performance hit.
gollark: (Indices with imaginary parts make it imagine data instead)
gollark: All Macron integers are 160-bit complex numbers so proper float support is good.
gollark: Lists are also implicitly circular.
References
- Jack M. Balkin (April 9, 2007). "What Professor Murphy's story tells us about the no-fly list".
- "A moment with..." Princeton Alumni Weekly. April 4, 2007.
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