Sounds like those were layoffs, that's what they were described as, and of course those happened at MIT as circumstances demanded.
I'm talking about outright firing for, example, no longer being able to do their job. Back then, such people were sidelined until they retired or otherwise left on their own accord, or at least that was the case in all examples I knew about.
I'm talking about outright firing for, example, no longer being able to do their job. Back then, such people were sidelined until they retired or otherwise left on their own accord, or at least that was the case in all examples I knew about.