Word: hancher
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Virgil M. Hancher grew up on an Iowa farm, went from the State University of Iowa to Oxford for his M.A., and eventually turned himself into a successful Chicago lawyer. But today at 55, Hancher is renowned neither as farmer nor lawyer: he is one of the top state university presidents...
...also a familiar figure far beyond his own 700 acres. Last week, when the American Council on Education wanted someone to head a new committee to study Government scientific research grants to universities ($100-150 million a year), it could think of no abler man than Virgil Hancher...
More Practitioners. In a way, it was an odd choice, for Hancher's own interests are anything but scientific. "We teach," says he, "and as a university always will teach the physical sciences . . . But our unique concentration of power focuses upon those things which concern men and women as men and "women." Hancher calls these things "humanology," and in the last twelve years Iowa has seen quite a bit of that...
Even before the famed Harvard Report (TIME, Aug. 13, 1945), Hancher was busy remodeling his curriculum, slashing away the hodgepodge of vocational courses in favor of a broad and solid liberal arts program ("What our cultural life needs today is more general practitioners"). He strengthened Iowa's flourishing school of fine arts, started a library where undergraduates for the first time could browse at will. Though he never neglected his budget (he tripled his appropriation to more than $10,000,000), or his plant (he established a full-fledged college of nursing, built a communications center, a hospital-school...
...storm over a report (pooh-poohed by U.C.L.A.) that a student and former Hawkeye center had telephoned vital Iowa football secrets to U.C.L.A.'s new and talented coach, Red Sanders. The loudest roar in the storm was the voice of Iowa's President Virgil Hancher: "A breach of canons . . . moral turpitude . . . Such a student would not be justified in receiving a degree from this university...