The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 10, 1981-Page 5-B The By SARA ANSPACH and DAVE MEYER In the early days of the University, admission requirements dictated that students pass certain proficien- cy levels in the classics, be able to pay the $10 entrance fee, and "furnish satisfactory testimonials of good moral character." Fron that beginning 164 years ago as a tiny public college of the Michigan Territory to its current status as one of the nation's most respected institutions of higher learning, the University has grown and changed with the students, faculty, and administrators who lived and shaped its history. A new path in education I BACK IN 1817, three men - a judge, a Catholic priest, and a Protestant clergyman in the half-French town of Detroit - had some innovative ideas about higher education. They felt a university should teach not only the arts and humanities, but also economics and the natural scien- ces. Because the University was founded in the still- developing area of Michigan, it could enjoy freedom unavailable to the established eastern schools to ex- erimnent with new types of education. Its' founders believed the University should not be an "isolated tower of learning," but the head of a state wide system of education, supported by public taxation. The early days PATTERNED AFTER these ideas, the University was established in October of 1817, but it wasn't until 1841 that the school was ready to offer courses. The seven students enrolled that year were required to take a classical curriculum that included rhetoric, grammar, Latin, Greek, algebra, geometry, and natural sciences. In the first days, the student body lived in and attended classes at an earlier Mason Hall. Paying $7.50 per term for Om (they ate at boarding houses in town), the students were awakened each day at 5 a.m. and had to be back in the dorm by 9 p.m. Although the new university could be considered suc- cessful, it had already experienced a number of problems by 1851 that would reappear in its history. Anthor Howard Peckham, in The Making of the University of Michigan, summed.up these problems: ' political meddling by the state legislature; " financial squeezing until a crisis is reached; " intrusion from the Board of Regents on matters that ould be of faculty concern; " factionalism among the faculty; rowdy or lawless student behavior outside of class, and; " irritations between Ann Arbor and the University. When the Michigan Territory became a state in 1837, the University was enlarged and moved to Detroit to a 40-acre plot iA Ann Arbor which now constitutes the core of Central Caiihpus. Further growth took place in the mid-19th century under President Henry 'Tappan. The concept that a professor hould engage in research in addition to teaching inated during this administration, and the University -Iblished graduate schools in medicine and law. Minorities gain acceptance In 1870, Erastus Haven assumed the presidency. One of the' most signifiant achievements of the haven ad- ministration was the admission in 1870 if Madelon Stock- well, the first woman to enter the University. Advocates of equal educational opportunities for women had been lobbying the University and Regents for 20 years, Uiverst, then and now 4 to gain admission for women, but it wasn't until the state legislature passed a resolution favoring it that the Univer- sity responded. THE MEDICAL SCHOOL continued to insist on separate lectures. The University had admitted two black students two years earlier, three years after the Civil War. That milestone was somewhat marred because they were not recorded as being black.; A grwoing university and reputation The first student newspaper, the University Chronicle, began publication in 1867. The Chronicle came out bi- weekly until a new student newspaper, the Michigan Daily, was published in 1889. By the turn of the century the Daily was the largest student newspaper in the country. James Angell succeeded Haven as University president in 1871. During his presidency 50 buildings were construc- Charges were dropped after the student body paid $1000 in damages. NEARLY A DECADE later the students had calmed down considerably in at least one area: consumption of spirited liquids. The University had always considered drinking a major problem among students, but prohibition fever swept the campus at about the same time a state amendment was up for adoption. A poll taken in 1916 in- dicated almost 80 percent of the students favored prohibition. The spirit of patriotism also ran high during World War I. The campus was filled with young cadets, and temporary military buildings sprang up as many joined the armed services or campus reserves. Boom and depression The twenties were rowdy years for Michigan students. Fraternities boomed, and the football season became the were older and more mature than their earlier counterpar- ts. Many were married and more interested in careers than collegiate "antics." For these students the University introduced "family housing," and to meet further growth in the 1950s North Campus was added and the Dearborn and Flint campuses were established. Student activities and activism SOME BRASH MEN from West Quad and South Quad made the headlines during this decade when they marched across campus and raided the women's dormitories, emerging with their underwear. This was alleged to be the first "panty raid" on any campus, and it was imitated across the country. The 1960s brought more serious activities to campus. In 1962 the Students for a Democratic Society was formed at the University. During the next decade, this group became a major force behind student activism on campus and across the country. Committed to daily struggles for social change in all spheres of society, SDS was involved in many protests and marches, some of which became violent. Concerned about the war in Vietnam, a group of faculty members announced in 1965 they would hold a one-day protest, refusing to teach classes. When disciplinary action was threatened, they compromised with the administration and decided instead to hold a "teach-in" on the war. More than 2500 students attendedthe affair. WHEN THE TIME came for the University to build a new administration building in the late sixties, the large number of student protests prompted it to be structured almost like a fortress with its concrete walls, small win- dows, and seal-off system. Student protests peaked in 1970, when the Black Action Movement held a nine-day strike protesting the treatment of blacks at the University. Parts of the University closed down completely. and one day more than half the student body showed support of the BAM demands by not attending classes. After the ninth day of the strike, President Robben Fleming agreed to negotiate with the strikers, and later the University decided to supply the necessary funds for a program aimed at attaining 10 percent enrollment of blacks by 1973. AFTER THE BAM protests in the early seventies, students quieted down and were accused by their predecessors of being apathetic and materialistic. But students haven't been totally silent during the past three years, as occasional issues have sparked their in- terest. During the last weeks of the 1979 academic year, students expressed outrage at the University's investments in "racist" South Africa by storming a Regents' meeting. Two years ago, demonstrations against the proposed registration for the draft, the Iranian terrorism, and mar- ches for the Equal Rights Amendment were attended by large numbers of vocal students. Just more than a year ago, a proposal to prohibit teaching assistants from instructing upper level courses in the Women's Studies Department was recommended by the administration. Supporters of the department, claiming that there' are no professors to teach their upper level cour- ses, conducted one of the year's most active demon- strations to keep the program alive. Economic issues have dominated at the University throughout the past few years, with steep tuition hikes and program reductions becoming a grim reality. The deteriorating financial health of the University was pain- fully illustrated last June, when the Regents voted to discontinue the Geography Department (see related ar- ticle, Section A). A small University with big ambitions, in the late 1800s. ted, and a growing number of prestigious scholars joined the faculty. Angell served as president for 38 years. During his tenure, the University established the Michigan football team. ANOTHER MAJOR CHANGE during Angell's term has, a lasting effect on students' academic life. Up until 1907, a student was -either passed, not passed, on conditioned. Gradually, with the founding of a Phi Beta Kappa honorary society, the A to E grading system was established. Students show spirit in many ways The years before World War I were generally quiet, but that doesn't mean life was routine. In 1908, for instance, the manager of the Star Theater in Ann Arbor said that he did not care for student patronage. The next night, armed with vegetables, eggs, and bricks, about a thousand students stormed the theater. They threw their ammunition at the walls and tore up the seats. year's highlight as Michigan won the Big Ten champion- ship in 1922 and 1923. This was also a great decade of jazz, and every weekend many students gathered at Drake's Sandwich Shop to dance. HOUSING BECAME a problem during the twenties. Students lived in rooming houses in town or in homes with friends because there was little University housing. In 1930, with violent opposition from local landladies who were afraid they'd go out of business, Mosher and Jordan Halls were built for female students. Six years later West Quad was built to house male students. The University's rapid growth of the twenties slowed, during the depression years, but it did not cease. The University benefited from substantial federal funding through Roosevelt's New Deal programs. World War II makes its mark During World War IIthe University offered programs to train officers and other military personnel. After the war, enrollment continued to rise with many new students taking full advantage of the GI Bill. These new students