David S. Saxon

David S. Saxon (February 8, 1920 – December 8, 2005) was an American physicist and educator who served as the President of the University of California as well as the Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the MIT Corporation, the governing board of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

He worked in MIT's famed wartime Radiation Laboratory during World War II.

Saxon joined the University of California, Los Angeles in 1947, but was dismissed in 1950 with thirty other faculty members because of their objection to signing an oath of loyalty and declaration that they were not Communist Party members.

[2] The California Supreme Court later invalidated this requirement and Saxon returned to UCLA in 1952.

Saxon joined the board of the MIT Corporation in 1977 and held the office of Chairman between 1983 and 1990.