Page 6-Friday, August 3, 1979-The Michigan Daily Harden says goodbye to MSU EAST LANSING (UPI) - Michigan State University is back in the academic, athletic, and social spotlight, but President Edgar Harden, leaving office today, accepts only part of the credit for MSU's revival. "I was just the catalyst," the 71-year- old Harden said modestly. WITH NEARLY 50 years in education behind him, Harden was the MSU trustees' choice to serve as the school's interim chief during the search for a Mackey taking the reins successor to Clifton Wharton, who left Michigan's largest university 20 mon- ths ago to head the State University of New York. Unlike the reserved,.proper Wharton, Harden is gregarious, down to earth and candid. Tomorrow, former Texas Tech President Cecil Mackey, a man with a Aspec~ 11~UpeJ ite fIt be#M CI" aM14 ew1eDar , T hfrAp,,"he~''"" restaurant reputation as a tough administrator, takes over the reins of the 46,000 student university. Harden is relieved to see an end to the long hours and respon- sibility of heading the massiy school. IF HE WERE 10 years younger, Har- den's admirers claim, his leadership and immense popularity with students and faculty would have made him the perfect choice to permanently head the massive university. But Harden, a dapper dresser who looks younger than his 71 years, said a few more years as MSU president would have tarnished those glowing reviews - at least a little. The president of a Lansing car dealership for 12 years, Harden views the MSU trustees from the standpoint of a businessman. Their role, he said, is to suggest policy and be sensitive to their constituents. BUT THE implementation of their actions should be left up to university administrators, he said. "They make a serious mistake when they try to combine policy with ad- ministration," Harden said. "The president is employed to implement policy." Last year, under student pressure, the trustees ordered the university to unload investments with firms doing business in South Africa. While the dec- ision, unique among U.S. universities, was hailed by many, it stirred what Harden terms "negative emotions" in many of the school's alumni. DESPITE THE trustees action on South African divestment, Harden said higher education should not make social change its primary goal. Colleges and universities must "narrow their mission," he said. "Let us teach people how to think for themselves and then let them deal with the issues," the Iowa native said. Harden came to Michigan in 1945, as principal of a Battle Creek high school and later was president of Northern Michigan University at Marquette. DURING HIS CAREER as an educator, Harden has seen both student activism and apathy. He commends today's students as "the best group of young people I've ever seen" because they work within the system instead of against it. The current trend toward career- oriented education, especially for 'women, pleases Harden, but he warned that the pendulum must not swing too far in that direction. Although he said higher education must clarify its purpose, Harden took issue with those who complain that college students are not as well educated as they once were. "WE HAVE TO decide if we're going to educate all the children of all the people," he said. "If we are, we're not going to have as high of standards as if we tool only the elitist group." Harden says he believes in taking that risk. Widespread education with slightly lower standards, he said, if preferable to limiting knowledge to the upper classes. Anavid sports fan, Harden's 20- month tenure law saw MSU claim Big Ten titles in football, basketball, and baseball, as well as the 1979 NCAA basketball crown - achievements he is visibly proud of. A former high school coach and MSU's representative on the Big Ten Conference Council at one time, Harden said collegiate sports are "the cement that holds the whole university family together." IT DOESN'T RAIN ON THIS PARADE FORT KNOX, Ky. (AP)-Military life continued as usual at Fort Knox, while the Baltimore District of the Cor- ps of Engineers "slip lined" 13 miles of plastic pipe to restore the crumbling sewer system. Polyethylene piple was inserted, or slipped, through broken and root- infested clay and concrete sewer lines, passing under homes with a mimimum of disruption. More Entertaining Thank Humanly Possible! STEVE ht BOB MARTIN HOPE . a t PAU L RICHARD , A -WILLIAMS PRYORWL - -- -rn awr FimDmot -STARTS TODAY- Shows Daily at 12:20-2:40-5:00-7:25-9:35