-T-- -' ' ---- _ ,, -44 - - *' - t *s : Anxieties Among the Educators (Continued from Preceding Page) 2) The civil rights of all citizens, including social scientists, were threatened by McCarthyism (as by any movement that makes loose accusations of treason). The ca- reers of some social scientists were seriously injured by McCarthyism. Some college administrators could have been more effective than they were in protecting- their faculties from these injuries. 3) Many social scientists were worried about the relation of their political views to their careers. We do not know how important they found these fears or how justified they were holding them. We do not know the extent to which these fears were products of McCarthy- ism. 4) Over 20 per cent of the social scientists were cautious. We do not know if cautiousness was stimu- lated by the national political situation, by McCarthyism in par- ticular, or by local political condi- ttons. We also do not know how justified these teachers were in their cautiousness. 5) The practices of college ad- ministrators can lower the likeli- hood of cautiousness, if not of worry. 6) We do not know how many social scientists were disloyal to the United States in thought or deed. HOWEVER we interpret their findingsLazarsfeld and Thie- lens do document the presence of anxieties of serious proportions. We cannot ignore the fact that almost a fifth of the social sci- entists in Arferica's colleges thought their college's administra- tion had a "political file or dossier on every faculty member." Over a fourth wondered if some political opinion they had expressed would harm their academic careers. Over a third had considered the possi- bility that someone at an institu- tion to which they were thinking of moving had made inquiries con- cerning the professor's political, views-. TO EVALUATE Lazarfeld's find- a faculty, the legislator and Judge ings about worry and caution, of what knowledge is most vali- we need perspective on the task of able. There are inescapable po- colleges in societies such as our flitical implications in such choices. own. The colleges are expected to con- serve, present, and extend that knowledge which leads to the most valid understanding of the world and the self. From the importance of that task _the colleges derive their support. From their perform- ance of that task they.also reap 'distrust. It is true, but too simple, to say that the colleges are distrusted just because they are entrusted with impressionable young minds. We have seen, first, that there, is some public distrust of all spe- cialists. Second, the faculty of a college does work which is in- herently subversive of custom. Since a faculty cannot teach every- -thing, it must select that which is worthy of preservation; discard or put into dead storage that which is of lesser significance. Since all that is known cannot be the sub- ject of a faculty's limited resources for resea'rch, it must decide what is worthy of continued investiga- tion. Choices of this order make of WHEN the college undertakes the functions of a university, these political implications in- crease., The functions of a university do not inhere simply in the granting of graduate or professional de- grees. A-university is an institu- tion in which the knowledge most significant for human affairs.,is, in Whitehead's words, "lighted up with imagination."' A university promotes, as he says, "the imaginative considera- tion of the various general prin- ciples" underlying knowing in general and the bringing of order into particular bodies of knowl- edge.-"Its students thus pass into their period of . . apprenticeship with their imaginations . prac- tised in connecting details with general principles. The routine then receives- its meaning, and also illuminates the principles which give it that meaning." Imaginative learning is, by defi- nition, concerned with novelty. It views what is already known in fresh perspectives. It uncovers un- suspected possibilities. One -can- not foresee when it will undermine even the most sacred of existing conceptions. It is this freedom from the historically immediate that imaginative rationality pro- vides. Like other ideals, it is an ever- lasting critic and solvent of the presently actual in which it is im- perfectly represented. In this set- ting we can appreciate the im- portance for -the society as well as the scholar of loose accusa- tions of disloyalty. (And let us be clear 'that while, as we shall see, social scientists are likely to be liberals, it is highly improbable that more than an infinitesimal fraction are traitors or sympathe- tic to totalitarianism, whether Russian or otherwise.) Relaxation is a method of breaking up YOU ARE NOW READING BETWEEN THE LINES OF A PRINCIPLE WE ENDORSE WHOLEHEARTEDLY, WE'VE subconscious habit patterns's o that the SEEN IT WORK WONDERS OVER AND OVER AGAIN. WHEN A MAN MAKES UP HIS MIND TO WEAR emotions associated with muscle tensior A WAYLITE TROPICAL SUIT TO THE OFFICE OR AROUND TOWN, HIS ATTITUDE BECOMES CALMER, MORE COMP( are relegated' into the limbo of forgotten HIS PERSPECTIVE CHANGES AND LIFE LOOKS A LOT EASIER AND BRIGHTER. HE MAY NOT KNOW IT, griefs and fears. Through re-education BUT INWARDLY HE IS TRYING TO LIVE UP TO HIS CASUAL OUTER SELF. IF YOU of the conscious and subconscious HAPPEN TO BELIEVE THAT A HABIT IS EASIER TO MAKE THAN BREAK, WE INVITE YOU TO STEP IN AND processes, conflicts caused by PRE-TEST THE SOOTHING INFLUENCE OF A MAGNIFICENT WAYLITE TROPICAL unverbalized behavior patterns SUIT AS H. FREEMAN & SON OF PHILADELPHIA SUPERBLY TAILORS IT can be discovered and brought IN A SLIM, EASY-FITTING THREE-BUTTON MODEL, AS IL LUSTRATED AT RIGHT. $79.50 under conscious control. the suit Co1mforI STROOCK FOLKWEAVE SPORT JACKETS $59.5Q WAYL T- T ICAL r fashionable WI LD'S State Street on the Campus 59