A view from 1961

When I'm not coaching Carleton's quiz team, I'm
Carleton's Archivist, and frequently in my work come across
interesting gems from the past. Here's a bit of pomposity I
happened upon today, from the editors of a Carleton
student opinion journal that was an alternative to the
official campus newspaper. In an April 1961 issue these
oh-so-serious 18-22 year olds weigh in with:

 "Something
not generally known by students who have watched the
'College Bowl' TV program is that Carleton was offered a
spot on the program this winter -- an invitation which
the faculty wisely turned down.
 'College Bowl'
seems to be a program which aims at commercial
exploitation of the ability to recall facts. Perhaps this is
inevitable, since viewers could hardly be expected to respond
so enthusiastically to essay questions, or to
research projects, or to the internal process by which
learning is assimilated and made applicable to real life
(assuming this last could be televised). But the result is
that the picture being presented of higher education
in this country is one of a group of fact factories
in which smiling, white-teethed professors with
horn-rimmed glasses feed rapid-fire fill-in-the-blank
questions to their eager (and, it must be admitted, rather
'pushy') students.
 Like most colleges, Carleton hasn't
come to that yet; until it does let's hope that offers
of the 'College Bowl' variety will continue to be
rejected."

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