登陆注册
15513800000031

第31章 CHAPTER I(9)

1. An instance showing something of the measure and incidence of fiscal service rendered by such a businesslike board may be suggestive, even though it is scarcely to be taken as faithfully illustrating current practice, in that the particular board in question has exercised an uncommon measure of surveillance over its university's pecuniary concerns.

A university corporation endowed with a large estate (appraised at something over $30,000,000) has been governed by a board of the usual form, with plenary discretion, established on a basis of co-optation. In point of practical effect, the board, or rather that fraction of the board which takes an active interest in the university's affairs, has been made up of a group of local business men engaged in divers enterprises of the kind familiar to men of relatively large means, with somewhat extensive interests of the nature of banking and underwriting, where large extensions of credit and the temporary use of large funds are of substantial consequence. By terms of the corporate charter the board was required to render to the governor of the state a yearly report of all the pecuniary affairs of the university; but no penalty was attached to their eventual failure to render such report, though some legal remedy could doubtless have been had on due application by the parties in interest, as e. g., by the academic head of the university. No such report has been rendered, however, and no steps appear to have been taken to procure such a report, or any equivalent accounting. But on persistent urging from the side of his faculty, and after some courteous delay, the academic head pushed an inquiry into the corporation's finances so far as to bring out facts somewhat to the following effect: --The board, or the group of local business men who constituted the habitual working majority of the board, appear to have kept a fairly close and active oversight of the corporate funds entrusted to them, and to have seen to their investment and disposal somewhat in detail -- and, it has been suggested, somewhat to their own pecuniary advantage. With the result that the investments were found to yield a current income of some three per cent. (rather under than over), -- in a state where investment on good security in the open market commonly yielded from six per cent to eight per cent. Of this income approximately one-half (apparently some forty-five per cent) practically accrued to the possible current use of the university establishment. Just what disposal was made of the remainder is not altogether clear; though it is loosely presumed to have been kept in hand with an eventual view to the erection and repair of buildings. Something like one-half of what so made up the currently disposable income was further set aside in the character of a sinking fund, to accumulate for future use and to meet contingencies; so that what effectually accrued to the university establishment for current use to meet necessary academic expenditures would amount to something like one per cent (or less) on the total investment. But of this finally disposable fraction of the income, again, an appreciable sum was set aside as a special sinking fund to accumulate for the eventual use of the university library, -- which, it may be remarked, was in the meantime seriously handicapped for want of funds with which to provide for current needs. So also the academic establishment at large was perforce managed on a basis of penurious economy, to the present inefficiency and the lasting damage of the university.

The figures and percentages given above are not claimed to be exact; it is known that a more accurate specification of details would result in a less favourable showing.

At the time when these matters were disclosed (to a small number of the uneasy persons interested) there was an ugly suggestion afloat touching the pecuniary integrity of the board's management, but this is doubtless to be dismissed as being merely a loose expression of ill-will; and the like is also doubtless to be said as regards the suggestion that there may have been an interested collusion between the academic head and the active members of the board. These were "all honourable men," of great repute in the community and well known as sagacious and successful men in their private business ventures.

2. Cf. The Instinct of Workmanship, ch. vii, pp. 343-352.

3. A subsidiary reason of some weight should not be overlooked in seeking the cause of this secularization of the boards, and of the peculiar colour which the secularization has given them. In any community where wealth and business enterprise are held in such high esteem, men of wealth and of affairs are not only deferred to, but their countenance is sought from one motive and another. At the same time election to one of these boards has come to have a high value as an honourable distinction. Such election or appointment therefore is often sought from motives of vanity, and it is at the same time a convenient means of conciliating the good will of the wealthy incumbent.

It may be added that now and again the discretionary control of large funds which so falls to the members of the board may come to be pecuniarily profitable to them, so that the office may come to be attractive as a business proposition as well as in point of prestige. Instances of the kind are not wholly unknown, though presumably exceptional.

4. Cf., e. g.. R. T. Crane. The Futility of All Kinds of Higher Schooling, especially part I, ch. iv.

5. Cf. R.T. Crane, as above, especially part I, ch. ii. iii, and vi. Cf. also H.P. Judson, The Higher Education as a Training for Business, where the case is argued in a typically commonplace and matter-of-fact spirit, but where "The Higher Education" is taken to mean the undergraduate curriculum simply; also "A Symposium on the value of humanistic, particularly classical, studies as a training for men of affairs," Proceedings of the Classical Conference at Ann Arbor, Michigan, April 3, 1909.

6. Cf. Bacon, Essays -- "Of Cunning", and "Of Wisdom for a Man's Self."7. Cf. ch. viii, especially pp. 242-269.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 时空买卖师

    时空买卖师

    你听说过买卖时间吗?你听说过时空买卖师吗?若没有,本书便会大大开拓你的视野。这个买卖时空的人,不是别人,而是一名才十七岁的香港少女。她通过买卖时空,不仅修得长生不老,青春永驻,而且还腰缠万贯,财源滚滚,在外星球上活得顺风顺水!而且,她和英俊男主的爱情,也十分完美,令人艳羡!
  • 冰之霸者

    冰之霸者

    寒飞,年馑十八,大商帝国,雪阳城寒氏家族家主的庶子?父亲寒威,寒氏家族族长……母亲是寒家的一个婢女,因为寒威有一次酒后乱性不小心占有了她,后来生下了寒飞。穿越而来的少年,奋发努力,创下了冰皇的奇迹,走上人生巅峰。
  • 我的终点是你

    我的终点是你

    离开五年,她终究还是回来了,男主和女主又会怎样呢,让我们拭目以待吧
  • 琥珀中的秘密

    琥珀中的秘密

    每个地方都有一个秘密,历史的长河将他们封存,慢慢凝成一个个如琥珀般美丽而又神秘的传奇
  • 对不起,角落里的你

    对不起,角落里的你

    夏季,一个美丽的季节,他和她相遇了,她们有共同的梦想,这个夏季,有快乐,有友情亦有爱情悄然而至,但夏季过去,他变成了明星,而她成了学生作家,他满世界找她,她去了他的每一场演唱会但是总是躲在阴暗的角落里,带着吉他、项链和一段回忆,是什么使得他们形同陌路?简介无能请入坑
  • 三国第一帮

    三国第一帮

    丐帮第58代帮主,阴差阳错穿越到三国。看他如何用降龙十八掌和打狗棍法结束三国动乱,走出汉人新的辉煌。
  • 卿本猖狂:邪帝请下榻

    卿本猖狂:邪帝请下榻

    【一对一男强女强绝对宠】她是赏金界的暗夜女王,绝色之姿,强大肆意,却在执行任务时,一步不慎被仇家围剿而死;她是被视作家族耻辱的无用废物,性格懦弱,无法修炼,更是被同族姐妹逼迫,葬身于魔兽爪牙之下。当怯懦无能的她成为了杀伐果断的她,一切都将发生翻天覆地的变化!夺神器,修神功,炼灵符,收了神兽做小弟,翻手为云覆手为雨,但她却偏偏栽在了他身上…他是烨王府的世子,身份尊贵,修为高深,容貌妖孽,却佯装病弱,步步诱妻。当天之骄子的他碰到绝色惊华的她,追妻三十六计,招招甜蜜。—————某男性感的薄唇勾出一个邪魅的弧度,笑得一脸暧昧:“娘子,咱们今晚滚床单?”
  • 读了便能高中状元的书

    读了便能高中状元的书

    某日心血来潮买得一本看了便能考取秀才的书,于是举家研读,期待来一个满门科举,称霸京城,却不想....
  • 刹帝逆妃,傻妃很狂妄

    刹帝逆妃,傻妃很狂妄

    兮伊洛原是要风的风,要雨得雨得“临界”老大。一朝被同父异母的亲弟弟以爱的名义将她推入地狱,可笑的是兮伊洛居然穿越了?穿越到鸟不拉屎的异世!更悲惨的是自己还是个人人唾弃的废物傻女。在这个以武为尊的异世,爹爹不爱,姨娘恶毒,姐妹们个个巴不得她死了干净。她活的如卑贱的蝼蚁般,可她堂堂“临界”之主怎么肯低头,怎么肯善罢甘休?于是,她炼丹药,收灵宠,以神农药典傲视天下药师。先天神体,神秘身世,寻宝传承,蔑视天下。可某一天,有个神秘的男人“女人,你这样趴在我身上不好吧?”
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)