Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
In April 1929 the trustees of the University of Chicago, in the midst of an unprecedented boom on the stock exchange, chose Robert Maynard Hutchins, the thirty-year-old dean of the Yale Law School, to be the fifth president. During the twenty-two years that followed, Hutchins made an impression upon the organization and the life of the young university of a kind such as his sponsors for the office and the newspaper public, which enjoyed the spectacle of a youthful rising star, hardly expected. He made this impression as a student, a thinker and a teacher. He made it not, as the times prompted him to do, by trying to keep the University abreast of the morning newspaper, which is dead the next day, but by trying to raise it toward the philosophical heights of Aristotle and the poetic heights of Homer, whose ideas and words are as fresh now as more than two millenniums ago.
1 For an extensive bibliography of Hutchins' published work, see Frodin, Reuben, “Bibliography of Robert M. Hutchins, 1925–1950,” The Journal of General Education, IV, 4 (07, 1950), 303–324.Google Scholar
2 See my letter to the editor in the first number of the new international magazine, Dtogenes.