Interview with Clifton Wharton
Michigan State University's fourteenth President, Clifton R. Wharton, Jr., was born in Boston, Massachusetts on September 13, 1926. Wharton's father served as a career diplomat in the United States Foreign Service for forty years. At the age of sixteen, Wharton entered Harvard University and graduated in 1947 with a B.A. in history. He received a Master's Degree from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies in 1948. After working five years at the American International Association for Economic and Social Development, Wharton earned M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in economics from the University of Chicago. In 1957, he joined the Agricultural Development Council, a Rockefeller Family Foundation. As a council associate stationed in Malaysia, Wharton directed programs in Vietnam, Thailand and Cambodia. He also taught and conducted research as a visiting professor at the Universities of Malaysia and Singapore. Wharton later became Vice President of the Council, a position he held until his accession the presidency of MSU in January 1970. His term of office was often a turbulent one, featuring student demonstrations in 1970 and 1972 as well as a National Collegiate Athletic Association investigation of the MSU football program. Fiscal problems resulting from budget cuts remained a constant problem throughout Wharton's tenure. His major achievements were his successful efforts to maintain the quality of MSU's academic programs despite budget reductions, his commitment to the education of the economically and educationally disadvantaged, and the integration of the School of Osteopathic Medicine with the other medical schools. Major innovations implemented under Wharton's tenure included the Presidential Commission on Admissions and Student Body Composition to study future enrollment policies and a Presidential Fellows Program to allow selected students and junior faculty members to gain experience in university administration. Wharton's most lasting contribution to the University was the completion of a new center for the performing arts. The building, dedicated in 1982, was named in honor of Wharton and his wife, Dolores, in recognition of the strong support, which they gave the project. Wharton resigned from Michigan State University in December 1977 to accept the Chancellorship of the State University of New York. Topics/People Covered in Interview include: early education, Thjeodore Schultz, early career, John Hannah, Larry Boger, Glen Johnson, James Bonnen, Dale Hathaway, Ralph Smuckler, Carl Eicher, Warren Huff, Clair White, Frank Hartman, G. Mennen Williams, Walter Adams, Woody Varner, Jack Breslin, Don Stevens, Blanche Martin, Frank Merriman, Dolores Wharton, student protests, Vietnam, Iran Film Series, lifelong education, fundraising, endowment, Advanced Management Program, Alex Trotman, Carl Taylor, Affirmative Action, Title IX, College of Osteopathic Medicina, Mike Magen, law school, Andrew hunt, Cooley Law School, University of michigan, Roger Wilkinson, Robert Perrin, Ira Polley, Gov. William Milliken, Urban Affairs program, James Jamilton, Ruth Hamilton, Center for Urban Affairs, athletics, NCAA investigation, Jack Fuzakm Burt Smith, Denny Stoltz, Jimmy Carter, Roslyn Carter, SUNY, John Cantlon, Milt Molidor, Lash Larrowe
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- Copyright Status
- In Copyright
- Date Created
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2000-06-01
- Interviewees
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Wharton, Clifton R., 1926-
- Interviewers
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Charnley, Jeff
- Contributors
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Michigan State University. MATRIX, Center for Digital Humanities and Social Sciences
Michigan State University. Office of the Provost
- Material Type
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Sound recordings
Interviews
- Language
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English
- Extent
- 2 audio recordings
- Holding Institution
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Michigan State University. Archives and Historical Collections
- Permalink
- https://n2t.net/ark:/85335/m5m61fn1b
Page Info
1 of 2: Interview with Clifton Wharton
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2 of 2: Interview with Clifton Wharton
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