Word: kimpton
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Having announced a threeyear, $32,700,000 fund-raising campaign to raise faculty salaries and bolster his campus's teaching and research facilities, Chancellor Lawrence Kimpton of the University of Chicago had one more piece of news. "I have," he told the annual banquet for "C" men, "a petition signed by some 300 students who say they wish to see Chicago re-enter football ... A president of a large Midwestern public university told me the other day that we must be nuts to think of re-entering the game. But nuts or not, we are giving it thoughtful consideration...
...Black. Kimpton knew that none of these problems could be licked overnight. The university had borrowed so much from its capital endowment that it was $3,000,000 behind in its repayment. Kimpton ordered his deans to slash their budgets 5%. He reduced his own secretarial staff from 15 to five, uprooted telephones all over the campus. Though he refused to cut faculty salaries, he realized that "you can't do the kind of hatchet job we're doing without its costing you something." He was forced to drop some research projects, could not always replace retiring professors...
...stop the spread of slums, Kimpton helped found a special Southeast Chicago Commission. The commission hired its own lawyer, law-enforcement officer, building inspector. It helped to drive cheating landlords out of the area, sparked a whole series of neighborhood redevelopment corporations. Kimpton himself called on Mayor Kennelly and President Eisenhower, helped persuade the city, state and Federal Government to back a $30 million slum-clearance program. Among the new buildings now going up in the vicinity: a row of houses and a bustling shopping center, as well as the already constructed new headquarters for the American Bar Association...
Imaginative Flair. When Kimpton attacked the problem of the Hutchins B.A., some professors shook their heads in dismay. But the chancellor made it clear that he had no intention of throwing out the broad sort of program Hutchins had in mind. Today the university offers three plans to its undergraduate students, depending on how much specialization they want. They can 1) take three years of general education and one of specialized "tutorial study," 2) take two years of general education and two of concentration, or 3) combine their general courses with their major throughout the four years. One fairly certain...
...these accomplishments, Kimpton realizes that the University of Chicago has lost much of the experimental glamour of the Hutchins era. Nor has he been able to replace such men as Physicist Enrico Fermi, who died last November, Psychologist Louis Thurstone and Sociologist Ernest Burgess, who retired, or Chemist Harrison Brown, Geologist F. J. Pettijohn and Physiologist Ralph Gerard, all of whom have gone elsewhere. Will Chicago ever again become as exciting a place as it used to be? The danger is, says Kimpton, "that you get so used to thinking in terms of retrenchment that you lose any imaginative flair...