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...Griswold said that he is not "undulyenvious" of fields so aided, not does he have any complaints about what the University has done to offset the imbalance. But he suggested that if the University is to accept large sums from the government largely for the support of science, "does it not thereby obligate itself to develop support of somewhat the same order for other fields of learning which do not currently attract governmental largesse...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Griswold Seeks Aid For Non-Scientists | 9/26/1962 | See Source »

...Griswold noted that he was not speaking of law alone, but also of economics, government, history, classics, literature, fine arts, languages, philosophy, education, design, public administration--fields which Harvard has a "positive duty to strengthen...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Griswold Seeks Aid For Non-Scientists | 9/26/1962 | See Source »

...find this private support is the "real challenge of universities, especially 'private' universities, in this now lengthening post-war period," Griswold stated. The natural sciences can develop a "balance of terror" but cannot alone save this "beleagured planet. We need, too, all the arts of understanding, of human relations, of persuasion, of negotiation and adjustment, of dealing with variables far more numerous and complex than those with which the natural sciences deal, or which are capable of resolution by computer...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Griswold Seeks Aid For Non-Scientists | 9/26/1962 | See Source »

...Griswold quoted from the Phi Beta Kappa address given at Commencement by Gerard Piel, the publisher of Scientific American: "But all too suddenly and unprepared, we have come to the fork in the road. The progress of which I speak has disclosed the noblest and most generous ends to human life and has placed in our hands the means to accomplish them here on this earth, [and] has also given the power of irrevocable decision to our historic capacity for cruelty and folly...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Griswold Seeks Aid For Non-Scientists | 9/26/1962 | See Source »

...develop the best probability that we will take the right fork in the road, and keep on it?" Griswold asked. "We clearly need the humanities to develop the spirits of men, and the social sciences to develop their understading of human problems and their skill in dealing with these problems. Surely the law, as the most organized and best developed of our means of ordering society has an important place in this grand task...

Author: By Richard B. Ruge, | Title: Griswold Seeks Aid For Non-Scientists | 9/26/1962 | See Source »

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