ESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1967 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY Saga of Catholepistemiad: 150 By STEPHEN WILDSTROM and is still remembered by the The University of Michigan was maze of streets in downtown born' out of a confltence . of dreams in the early 19th century. First of all, there was the great dream, the American Dream, the dream of the Confederation Con- gress for a vastly expanded coun- try and an improved Northwest. Congress took a step toward realization of this dream in 1787 when the Northwest Ordinance! was passed, wisely declaring thatj "schools and the means of edu- cation shall forever be encour- aged." Pioneer settlers in the village of Detroit also had a dream of cre- ating an institution of higher ed- ucation in the Territory of Mich- igan. Father Gabriel Richard, a Ro- man Catholic priest; the Rev. John Monteith, Michigan's first{ Detroit. Clearly, a new school in the West required a new terminology and Judge Woodward generously provided it. The school was to be called the Catholepistemiad of1 Michigan, to be made up of 13 "didaxiim" of professorships with the "didactor of Cathofepiste- mia," or universal science, to serve as president. Even the local Indian tribes were caught up in the dream. They gave the school three sec- tions of land "because their chil- dren might want to-go to college." It seems a shame that until this year, these founders of the Uni- versity were all but forgotten by their dream-child. While later In 1821. the Catholepistemiad folded and the territorial govern- ment created a university in De- troit as its legal successor. How- ever, like its predecessor, the uni- versity never got off the ground and never offered any college- level courses. Finally, in 1837, the University as we know it -was born in Anp Arbor with the admission of Mich- igan into the Union and the es- tablishment of the Board of Re- gents. The new school needed a site and some enterprising local land speculators offered two 40-acre tracts to the Regents. One was in the gentle hills along the Huron River, now the site of North Cam- pus, and the other was a square of spent farmland just' east of University builders-Haven, Tap- the tiny settlement. For reasons pan, Angell--are well-remember- of their own, the Regents chose ed, no fitting monuments. to the the barren piece that is now the Rnn nn~nth x~hnhQQQ nna Din Angell protestiant m~iinister; and udgeUSK. IV. 1VeiObU, wn.o Inas a ollege g.seven students taught by a faculty In 1871, 42-year-old James Bur- Augustus Woodward, a man of named after him at Wayne State The perennial financial prob- of two. For a $10 entrance fee, rill Angell became University fertile mind and fantastic imag- University, Judge Woodward, who lems still plagued the school and these first students were entitled president. He started younger and ination, were three men who felt is recalled by Detroit's main street, no construction was started until to be awakened every morning served longer than any other that Michigan should have a pub- or Fr. Richard, who has a park in 1840 when four houses for pro- at 5:30 for compulsory chapel. president and under Angell, the lic school system. They persuaded Detroit, has ever been erected at fessors were built. One of these a : for cm ry capel, rersit g erm A rther and badgered the territorial gov- the University. forms the core of the President's In the summer of 1852, an event University grew from a rather ernment until they received per- For the most part, the Cathole- House on South University, mak- that was to have a lasting effect backwoodsyinstitution intooneof mission to proceed with their plan. pistemiad remained little more ng that the oldest building on on the development of the Un- the countryxs major universities. Any project that the good judge than a dream. It was chartered in campus and one of the oldest in versity took place. A distinguished In 1890, the University became thestatEastern educator, Dr. Henry Philip the largest school in the United undertook bore the clear stamp 1817 but was constantly on the e se.Tappan, became president. Tap- States with 2,692 students. Until of his highly original mind. He verge of bankruptcy. It held very It was 1841 when the University panbecame president stdes.rUntil laid out the first street plan for few classes of any sort and never of Michigan finally got down to mitment to the Prussian system of a sort of super-professor. Angell Detroit - strongly influenced by offered any courses on the college the business of educating stu- education, a system dedicated to made the job a purely adminis- L'Enfant's plan for Washington-- level, dents. The first class consisted of ections andysemrdhdaterhtatejo a.dpuheUnisy lectures and research rather' than trative function and the University the English system of tutorials entered into a period of great :.;:. ...::: and residential colleges. growth. During Anell's 34-year Tappan was convinc th tre- tenure, theUniversity firs ..................................................<"'' ' search was a vital part of a uni- achieved a formidable reputation ::.t ::}x. ;.:.. ...". ? , f, ' .v: ..::.# versity, largely a new concept- in for academic excellence. '.5}::=-.._.:?:::: -:?:..... . ?}::.. }:.. Michigan. He also abolished the Also in 1890, a group of dissi- :::<>rsidntil rrangements that had dent non-fraternity men left the been in effect since 1841 and stu- staff of the student newspaper, r k dents were given their introduc- The University Chronicle, and in- tion to Ann Arbor landlords. itiated a new, sports oriented -.The 19th eintry wa largely paper, The Michigan Daily. a period of quiet, steady growth for the University. The major con- troversy was a long-running feud between the Legislature and the University over the teaching of homeopathy, a long extinct form of medical. practice. The Legisla- ture insisted that that a chair of homeopathy be established in the medical school and the Uni- versity, ignoring annual threats of being cut off without a penny, steadfastly refused. The chair never was established. Although political protests were virtually unheard of until World War I, the students were not really a passive lot. Their favorite stunt was crashing the gates of any circus that dared to come to town and raising as much hell as they could get away with. Early 'U' Building on the Newly-Opened Ann Arbor Campus __ __ _ _ __ 7Te /of 1QSx Located in Scenic Northern Ann Arbor Area (Dixboro) Best selection of seafood in Ann Arbor area 'the fish you eat today played yesterday in Gloucester Bay" OTHER SPECIALTIES: the finest steaks, pan fried chicken, and roast prime ribs of beef CATERING J ON OR OFF PREMISE i irC r* f/I At 17cIKI