Hesin Mulls UO's Growth. Functions By Thomas Rice Henn Profenor of EnglitS Univertily of Cambridga ► (Kil. N' o f (•: Thin art I e I « written by Thomas It. Hern, who visited the University in , Deeemher, and the accompany ing sketch of Him by Horn are reprinted from the Sunday, Jan. IS, Oregonian.) „ In a way it nil looked familiar - gray skies, intermittent rain, - buildings that had obviously grown up (as they should) with the growth of the university; signs of adaptation in their re modeling to now functions in the connecting passagf s; evidences of f vigorous life in the raw earth— of levelling, of new footings go ing in. 1 he students go to and I* f"i'm their lectures, not “with i the wind in their gowns," for they do not wear them here, but still very much like our own. Yet this university is conscious that, like the state, it is new. It is proud of its descent from the Pioneers; two bronze statues, the Pioneer Father and the Pio neei Mother, stand on the axis of the campus. A Closer Look But as one looks closer so much is different. For one thing there is a mag nificent new Union building: a little raw as yet in its brick and plate glass and chromium, in which every imaginable activity is centered a bowling alley; committee rooms for student so cieties; admirable lounges and browsing rooms to supplement the library; spacious halls in . which to eat. Everywhere there are tire signs of money profusely but, I think, wisely spent. For if a university is anything, these young men and women must play (do not we all learn by play?) at the art of living; to organize and to lead; to per suade; to act as host or hostess; to co-operate with their fellows. And as the closed, complex so ciety, and the continual impact of ideas motivate them (they will not know how, nor fully under stand why) they move imper ceptibly down the slipways to take the water at graduation. Yet it is less of a shock, this launching, than with us; for many of these folks will have worked at fullscale jobs in the vacations, and even during the term. Go to the theater, and there is a stage more lavishly equipped than many a provincial theater in England; with endless experi mental resources for small groups to train and rehearse un der expert supervision. (One could never find them grow pro fessionally, at home.) Unity in the Arts Move across to Architecture and one is confronted with some thing that I have not yet seen in Europe: a whole department in which the graphic, plastic and visual arts are treated as a unity — where you may work in metal or engrave on stone; where the architect has a chance to see what the sculptor and the painter are doing; so that they may in fluence his building. The progress of design moves upward from the elementary principle of color, form and line; through structures understood by making aaodels of them; and you learn (even if you prove, at the ► end, not to have that strange thing called creative genius) the essential muscle and bone that underlie form and flesh, in build ings or in men. And if, under wise guidance, you come to see that all things are one, your time has not been wasted; so that, as a student of architecture, a visitor may find you reading Shakespeare’s Son nets during your lunch hour, for Horn Sketches Henn's Personality uy Robert D. Horn Profei»or of EnglitS Thomas Klee Henn, professor ol Knglish at England's great I nlversity of Cambridge, re cent ly spent two days on the I nivrjsity ol Oregon rumpus. In addition to iiis scheduled lecture on tin- background of Irish drama, Henn managed to see a good deal or campus life. He might even claim member ship hi the faculty, since hr also lectured to four classes ill Kngllsh and drama. Kvcrywhere he went Henn carried with him the atmos phere of a great teacher. With needless apologies, he con stantly interrupted somewhat startled students with ques tions as to what they were reading and doing. Thus lie deftly sampled the American student mind, in the classroom, the corridors and study hails of the library, and in the laboratory. What he found appears to have pleased him, as his comments show. While Ilenn quoted widely and constantly from the poets, ••specially Shakespears a n d Yeats, lie showed himself to la- no refugee from the Ivory Tower. Along with being a lover of poetry, he is a passionate de votee to boat building and sail ing, an expert on fly fishing, with a book on fly tying among Iiis published works, and a high ranking officer in the British army. As a member of General Klsenhower’s staff, he had eharge of 30 officers, half Brit ish and half American, during the planning of the Normandy invasion. His most recent book, “The Apple and the Spectroscope,” grew out of a course of lecture on poetry designed especially foe students of science. In this and in his larger study of W. B. \ eats, “The Lonely Tower” (1950), he shows the broad in terests in all the arts and their relation to everyday living that are prominent in his “look at a western university.” the be: t of reasons: because you like them. I found an attractive girl doing ju.st that. Everywhere there is a sense of energy ami purpose, different perhaps from our own. because in some ways it is differently focussed. Most of these students look younger than those of Ox ford and Cambridge, for half of ours do their two years' service before they come into residence. There are far more women on the campus here (and we don’t have a campus anyway); an ele ment of distraction to be bal anced against the greater sensi bility and conscientiousnesa of the woman student. Loyalties which with us would be centered on a college, with its history of four or five hundred years, are here .split- I do ryrt know "in what' prbportimis*1-be tween 'the fraternity and the uni versity itself. Noisier Background The students live more gre gariously, and against a more noisy background; the inesti mable value of a room of one's own, of having to be and to think alone, is perhaps less fully re alized. They work in the afternoons instead- of playing games—do they watch them rather than play them—and they do not seem to work or talk so late at night. The rooms of the professors, the offices at which their students call, are more cramped, less gra cious than the ‘living sets' which such men are found at home: Where a man waiting in an outer study is likely to find surround ings which are more pleasant— in books, pictures, and perhaps human interest. The impact of all this on the visitor is confusing, and a little frightening. Our own organiza tion is casual; here everything seems tightly controlled, most of all by the students themselves. In ten years time, they tell me, the numbers of students who claim admission will have in creased enormously. There is room for expansion on this gen erous site; the temporary huts which they, (like ourselves) have inherited from the postwar per iod will one day be replaced. What is the destiny of such a university? How can it best con tinue to serve Oregon—a state not yet a hundred years old?— and that wider state of our own way of life? As one ponders the problem, it seems arguable that such a university has really four sepa rate functions, and not (as it seems to an outsider) a single confused one. It should seek to turn out, as regards the majority of its stu dents, balanced and reasonably educated men and women, whose general discipline would include five or six subjects with some specialization in the last two years. (Is there not a case, in any event, for some carefully plan ned ‘•filtering" system at the end of the sophomore year?) This majority will go forward with a general education, so designed that they can project at least some parts of it into the future. Those who are suitable for 'ad vanced' studies might split into two theoretical ‘streams’. One would be composed of the candidates for higher education al posts; some would move even tually to the Ph. D. stage, though I have more to say on this. The second stream would be the men of firstclass minds with no intention of going into the teaching profession. These persons would form, ror the remainder of their lives a 'pool' from which men and wom en would be drawn into civic, state and federal government as opportunity arose. They would not necessarily be trained in ‘civ ics’ or in ‘social sciences,’ and there is probably a case for en couraging different and more se vere discipline such as mathe matics or law; but it should be possible to create a tradition by which such people could see their future responsibilities as citizens in just that light. (Nothing is more striking, to a visitor, than the ability and willingness of the American system to use such men on secondment, as it were, to take part in great issues of the state or nation. Must Accept Call I believe that it is part of a university’s task to imbue its students with the expectation that, if they prove their capa cities, they are liable to be called to such service: and that they must accept, whatever the price in material welfare. There is, I think, a fourth com ponent, as exemplified by the men and women who have been through the art and architecture school, and who seem to me a factor of immense political im portance in the national life. Provided they show some ap titude for their own highly spec ialized arts, they might enjoy some relaxation of purely aca demic standards; for these things, as I saw them being taught at this university, are not the “soft option’’ that they are often considered to be. And if such students are introduced, sci entifically, to the skills of their hands, to a sensuous knowledge of their environment; if they can be taught to feel as well as to know they will draw in through their hands and eyes a basic knowledge that will bring to life their later encounter with the Western Tradition of Europe. We should not expect that the genuine creative artist will emerge frequently; and he is provided for by a system—again unique in my experience — of granting a higher degree for purely creative work. Eut if a hundred such men and women, of real understanding, could be turned loose annually into the community, the effect on that community, in half a century or less, would be incalculable. Learning How to Live I do not suggest that it would produce a new western renais sance; I do suggest that it would do much to restore the balance— against all our technological de velopment-in learning how to live. Of the professorial staff who were my very gracious hosts it is difficult to speak. At a guess X would say that they, and the whole administrative system, seemed to be more tightly or ganized, and with more elabor ate clerical facilities, than one would expect to find in an Eng lish university. They seemed to be more conscious of their re sponsibilities, more closely in touch with their students, than in several institutions that I have seen in the eastern United States. I can only make some general reflections. A great university must have great scholars; for only then will students from far and wide come to sit at their feet. But greatness is scholar ship, in any true sense, cannot be completely measured by any of the normal scales. You may have men who are of interna tional reputation for their pub lished research. They are im mensely valuable. But beside them stand others, whose scholarship may be as finely tempered; whose memor ials are not on library shelves, but in many generations of pu pils whom they have taught, not necessarily how to be scholars, but how to live. Every university needs both; more of the second, perhaps, than of the first, who will be in any event rare. And once a university becomes so large and cumbrous that its president does not know his pro fessors as friends, and the pro fessors do not know their pupils; if those who govern it like the lazy way of assessing the value of its staff by the weight of their writings or by the multiplicity of their degrees, that university loses one of its main justifica tions for existence. It must teach; and in the last resort it must teach not the mass but the individual. Therefore a university must keep itself small enough to be human; to be, as Aristotle calls it, ‘perspicuous'. For only by human contacts can the individual dignity of man, Ms immensely complicated needs, be fostered and fulfilled. Here, as elsewhere (and with * us) the problem of these human relationships is continuous. Five or six thousand people, adob .1 cent, alert, keen on their pros pective careers, thrown into a fairly complex social system which may be- quite strange to them it is to be expected that a number of them (and tho-e often of the finest material) will have their difficulties. Teachers Must Advise Much has been done here by appointing advisers and counsel ors: men and women who have qualities of tact, sympathy and leadership, and experience in breaking strains. But however good their will, intuitive knowl edge of such difficulties is per haps more common in older men and women; and, just as tie administrative and teaching sides should never be wholly {sep arated, so the counselor and t>~ teacher should, if possible, be one; for the adolescent's prob lems are often integral with h e teaching, and because his teach ers alone can provide a sense of continuity between the geneia tions of students. The psychological strain of an academic life is considerable; few young people know fully eith< c their strength cr their limita tions. Troubles which seta laughable at. thirty loom ve- y large at nineteen. An older per son. who is accessible for confi dences that would never be told to relations, is often invaluable in restoring perspective. It has often been said that re search is of paramount import ance in a university. Up to a point that is true; but no amount of research can redeem a failure to provide vital and illuminating teaching. A continent-wide problem *3 that of the Ph. D.; for which a man or woman may spend three or four of the best years of his life in work which is of no value whatever for the furtherance e? human knowledge .and is of du - bious value to the researcher. Yet—such is the complexity of the academic ladder—it has be come an almost essential aca demic passport. Is it not possible to devise some method by whir n they only proceed to research who are filled with zeal for 't and for a particular subject: in which a higher degree such as the M. A. cQuld be accepted aw evidence of competence in a par ticular subject, and the writing of serious work postponed unt.l the writer is ripe for this? Know Books and Men If he is a natural teacher. his first ten years will provide the younger scholar with far more knowledge both of books and men than a long and dull grind at research: which too often seems to kill the sympathetic or illuminating quality of mind which our civilization seems io lack. The impressions grow a little clearer. Here is a significant thing—with energy, wealth, in dustries, raw material, a vigor ous growing people, wise guid ance. and superb buildings, and a rapidly growing tradition; giv en a clear view of its function, there is nothing that it cannot do. political, civic and educational, But it must keep itself reason ably small, so that it may be a society; it must grow naturally, creating its own character from its teachers and pupils, not mod eling itself on other institutions, but drawing new blood from the exchange of ideas with them; and keeping in mind, perhaps, this form of its function, scholarly, political, civic and educational, of which I have spoken.