Web Exclusives: Under the Ivy
a column by Jane Martin paw@princeton.edu


March 26, 2003:

The Character Question, Circa 1933

"Seldom has the Weekly been privileged to present in a single issue three letters more challenging," wrote editor Datus Smith '29 in PAW's March 24, 1933, issue. The letters discussed three concerns of the day — concerns that still echo in our day: the role of education in national life, the club "problem," and the necessity of alcohol at alumni events, specifically Reunions. (This last was inspired by a remarkable letter from the chair of the Reunion committee, Charles Browne 1896, which read in part, "...no class reunion can be worthwhile or successfully carried through without the use of alcoholic beverages.") Smith invited alumni to respond and debate each point.

The latter two questions earned mostly eye-rolling and here-we-go-again-ing. Sarcasm reigned heavy in Richard G. Preston '18 's response to Browne — "Nothing more need be said on the reunion problem" — while Lloyd Haupt '16 wrote in exasperation, "May I not suggest that if this club problem, whatever it is, is perennial and nobody does anything about it, like the weather, that we just quit talking about it." (He received a tart response from Smith: "One is inclined to ask whether Mr. Haupt's defeatism extends to the problem of crime — whether, because crime is perennial, no efforts should be made to cope with it.")

But the letter regarding the first question, the role of Princeton in preparing men of character, inspired a sharp debate. Written by John Bright 1890, it was in response to a speech by acting Princeton President Edward Duffield 1892 (who was serving while the Board of Trustees, which he chaired, searched for a replacement to President Hibben, who had retired in 1932).

When reading excerpts from Duffield's speech, given on Alumni Day 1933, it's hard to know what would raise Bright's hackles. Duffield laid out three general goals for Princeton: that "we must recognize the importance of maintaining here on this campus a residential college unequalled in this country or abroad"; that the "end of education is the development of a man and of a leadership which will improve existing conditions"; and that "we should give a man a philosophy of life ... The purpose is not only to send out men of leadership, but men who have a philosophy which gives them a willingness to sacrifice for their fellow men."

Not entirely controversial sentiments on their face, and Bright had no problem with the first tenet, that of academic excellence. It was the next two that gave him pause. "Under the second heading are listed some of the worst features of modern American education," he railed. "Just what is meant by training the character I do not know. ...It is the spiritual quality of those who achieve greatness in politics, morality, or murder. ...The official statement that the purpose of education is to improve existing conditions in the outside world is the very sublimation of toryism." The third point, he went on, "is quite as devastating as is the second to any valid system of thought," because Duffield based his notion of a philosophy in Princeton's Christian roots. "Religion, by definition, is belief ... and is not subject to proof. Now, how a philosophy which must have its support in the reasoning mind and to which the tiniest unproved premise is a deadly poison can be formed out of a religion that is forbidden to question a dogmatic assertion is a riddle for which there is no answer in Princeton, Rome, or Mecca."

Alumni rose to Duffield's defense, if only to scold Bright for his "ungracious" attack. Duffield himself had the last word, however. At an athletic banquet, PAW reported, football coach Bill Roper 1902 remarked, "When we win games we talk about football; when we lose we talk about character building." When Duffield gave his own speech, he said he must be there to represent one of the "off" years, but added that he hesitated to touch on the topic of character, because the last time he did so he read a letter in the Weekly criticizing him for undermining American education.

 

Jane Martin ’89 is PAW's former editor-in-chief. You can reach her at paw@princeton.edu