New
Releases
-Forthcoming
Search
Series
-Ohio
History & Culture
-Akron Series in Poetry
-Ohio Politics
-Law,
Politics, & Society
-International
History
-Technology
& Environ.
-Principia
Press
Catalogue
-by
Author
-by
Title
-by
Series
-Order
Submit Manuscript
-Poetry
-International
History
-Law,
Politics, & Society
-Ohio
History & Culture
-Technology
& Environ.
About Us
-Staff
|
|
|
Downstairs,
Upstairs
The Changed Spirit and
Face of College Life in America
by John A. Flower
375 pp., 6 x 9, index
Cloth
978-1-884836-96-1; $39.95
SALE: $26.95 
Paper 978-1-931968-18-8; $15.95
SALE: $10.95 
Ohio History and
Culture
-View
an excerpt from Downstairs, Upstairs-
|
|
Order online through our distributor, Atlas Books, or by calling 1-800-247-6553
|
|
| Money and privilege
no longer describe college students who, books in hand, stroll across
fair campuses. Changes in American college life since the 1960s make
the previous 300 years—from the founding of Harvard in
1636—benign by comparison. Today, universities in gritty
downtowns admit welfare mothers who struggle to escape grinding
poverty. Sometimes they have to take their babies to class with them.
Felons from prison enroll through special programs hoping for training
that will enable them to surmount previous misdeeds. Men and women in
low-paying jobs enroll part-time. They head families, struggle with car
and rent payments, and are always tired. But they attend college
classes, struggling to stay awake, preparing themselves for better jobs.
Author John A.
Flower—World War II combat pilot, concert pianist, university
president—takes us on an extraordinary professional and
personal
odyssey in this new book. As dean at Kent State University he was
engulfed in the Vietnam War protests and witnessed the shattering
events of May 4, 1970. During 20 years as vice president, then
president, of Cleveland State University he was the target of racial
protests that took place on campus. At the same time a lurid scandal
involving the high-profile basketball coach required Flower to dismiss
him. For more than 50 years he participated from the inside as profound
changes across the nation caused ivory towers to crumble.
Flower writes
eloquently and powerfully, helping readers to understand how forces for
change reshape colleges and universities. He illustrates how external
special-interest groups influence campus affairs, and analyzes their
influence on curriculum, affirmative action, contract issuance, land
acquisition, unionism, and a multitude of other issues. He uses his
experience to present ways in which concerned citizens and community
leaders can address change in positive ways. Downstairs,
Upstairs is a wake-up call and a must-read for all Americans
who recognize the imperative for higher learning.
|
|
John
A. Flower, President
and Professor Emeritus of Cleveland State University, served higher
education for 55 years occupying rungs on the academic ladder from
graduate assistant through professorial ranks to university president.
|
|