Statement by Commissioner of Education Earl James McGrath to Ben Fine of the New York Times
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OCR Page 1 of 2STATEMENT *
Our great system of higher education in the United States has in
my judgment flourished because it embraces both privately and publicly
supported institutions.
I am disturbed, therefore, by the generally admitted financial plight
of private colleges and universities both large and small. Public supported
institutions of higher education also are having financial problems which
should concern us. But the plight of most of the privately supported colleges
and universities is particularly serious. It is important that our people
should continue to support these latter institutions. Corporations and
other large interests--particularly those which make direct use of the
resources, both material and human, of these higher institutions--have a
special responsibility to support them. But I would also call the attention
of alumni to their obligation to contribute in accordance with their means,
to the financial support of their own college or university. The preservation
of these centers of learning which have contributed so largely to our
productive capacity, our general well-being, and to the strength of our free
institutions is a responsibility which all Americans should share.
*By Earl James McGrath, U. S. Commissioner of Education, Federal Security
Agency, Washington, D. C., to Mr. Ben Fine of the New York Times,
October 28, 1952.
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