Description

Book Synopsis
The Mason Gross School of the Arts in New Brunswick, New Jersey, stands as a memorial to one of Rutgers University’s most influential leaders. Gross started teaching at Rutgers as an assistant professor of philosophy in 1946, but quickly rose through the ranks to become the university’s provost in 1949 and finally its president from 1959 to 1971. He led the university through an era when it experienced both some of its greatest growth and most intense controversies.

Free Spirit explores how Gross helped reshape Rutgers from a sleepy college into a world-renowned public research university. It also reveals how he steered the university through the tumult of the Red Scare, civil rights era, and the Vietnam War by taking principled stands in favor of both racial equality and academic freedom. This biography tells the story of how, from an early age, Gross came to believe in the importance of doing what was right, even when the backlash took a toll on his own health.

Written by his youngest son Thomas, this book offers a uniquely well-rounded portrait of Gross as both a public figure and a private person. Covering everything from his service in World War II to his stints as a game-show personality, Free Spirit introduces the reader to a remarkable academic leader.

Trade Review
"This truly engaging and eminently readable biography recounts with insight, candor, and empathy the compelling life and the exemplary, highly principled career of the author’s father. It is particularly valuable for its treatment of how Mason Gross successfully met the recurring challenges he confronted during his eventful presidency of Rutgers." -- B. Robert Kreiser * author of Miracles, Convulsions, and Ecclesiastical Politics in Early Eighteenth-Century Paris *
"Gross’s life story is an inspiring testament to the power of ideas and principles, one that offers an important lesson and a warning in our era." -- Chris Rasmussen * Associate Professor of History, Farleigh Dickinson University *
"Mason W. Gross promoted a sense of calm and reason during a decade of political action and social awareness."
-- Thomas J. Frusciano * Rutgers University Archivist, The Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries *
Alumni Profiles: The Living Legacy of Mason Gross by Leslie Aristo Pfaff * Rutgers Today/Rutgers Alumni Association *

"This is a book that historians of higher education will find invaluable, especially for the insights it offers to Mason’s character and temperament."

-- G. Kurt Piehler * NJS Journal *

Table of Contents
Author’s Note
1 Prologue: The Inauguration, 1959
2 Postmark: Willcox, Arizona, 1928
3 Postmark: Cambridge, England,1930
4 The Blind Date, 1939
5 Postmark: Somewhere in Italy, 1944
6 The Homecoming, 1945
7 Goodbye to New York, 1946
8 In the Second Chair, 1949
9 Rutgers v. the Red Scare, 1954
10 Philosophy of Education v. the “Big Lie”
11 The Inauguration, 1959
12 Into the Fishbowl, 1959
13 The Cultural Wasteland, 1959
14 Nothing at Rutgers Was Ever Easy
15 Crisis, 1961
16 Faith and Reason
17 Score Once More, 1965
18 The Inflection Point, 1965
19 The Silent Steinway, 1965
20 The Jewel in the Crown
21 The Year Everything Went Wrong, 1968
22 Law and Order, 1968
23 Faith and Reason v. Law and Order
24 June 1970
25 Complicated, 1971
26 Guggenheim, 1972
27 The Door Opens, Then Closes Tight, 1975–1977
28 The Last Post, 1977
29 The Hope That Lies within You, 2020
Appendix: Personal Histories, Correspondence, Reminiscences, and Interviews
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Free Spirit: A Biography of Mason Welch Gross

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Thomas W. Gross

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      View other formats and editions of Free Spirit: A Biography of Mason Welch Gross by Thomas W. Gross

      Publisher: Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 17/09/2021
      ISBN13: 9781978808331, 978-1978808331
      ISBN10: 197880833X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The Mason Gross School of the Arts in New Brunswick, New Jersey, stands as a memorial to one of Rutgers University’s most influential leaders. Gross started teaching at Rutgers as an assistant professor of philosophy in 1946, but quickly rose through the ranks to become the university’s provost in 1949 and finally its president from 1959 to 1971. He led the university through an era when it experienced both some of its greatest growth and most intense controversies.

      Free Spirit explores how Gross helped reshape Rutgers from a sleepy college into a world-renowned public research university. It also reveals how he steered the university through the tumult of the Red Scare, civil rights era, and the Vietnam War by taking principled stands in favor of both racial equality and academic freedom. This biography tells the story of how, from an early age, Gross came to believe in the importance of doing what was right, even when the backlash took a toll on his own health.

      Written by his youngest son Thomas, this book offers a uniquely well-rounded portrait of Gross as both a public figure and a private person. Covering everything from his service in World War II to his stints as a game-show personality, Free Spirit introduces the reader to a remarkable academic leader.

      Trade Review
      "This truly engaging and eminently readable biography recounts with insight, candor, and empathy the compelling life and the exemplary, highly principled career of the author’s father. It is particularly valuable for its treatment of how Mason Gross successfully met the recurring challenges he confronted during his eventful presidency of Rutgers." -- B. Robert Kreiser * author of Miracles, Convulsions, and Ecclesiastical Politics in Early Eighteenth-Century Paris *
      "Gross’s life story is an inspiring testament to the power of ideas and principles, one that offers an important lesson and a warning in our era." -- Chris Rasmussen * Associate Professor of History, Farleigh Dickinson University *
      "Mason W. Gross promoted a sense of calm and reason during a decade of political action and social awareness."
      -- Thomas J. Frusciano * Rutgers University Archivist, The Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries *
      Alumni Profiles: The Living Legacy of Mason Gross by Leslie Aristo Pfaff * Rutgers Today/Rutgers Alumni Association *

      "This is a book that historians of higher education will find invaluable, especially for the insights it offers to Mason’s character and temperament."

      -- G. Kurt Piehler * NJS Journal *

      Table of Contents
      Author’s Note
      1 Prologue: The Inauguration, 1959
      2 Postmark: Willcox, Arizona, 1928
      3 Postmark: Cambridge, England,1930
      4 The Blind Date, 1939
      5 Postmark: Somewhere in Italy, 1944
      6 The Homecoming, 1945
      7 Goodbye to New York, 1946
      8 In the Second Chair, 1949
      9 Rutgers v. the Red Scare, 1954
      10 Philosophy of Education v. the “Big Lie”
      11 The Inauguration, 1959
      12 Into the Fishbowl, 1959
      13 The Cultural Wasteland, 1959
      14 Nothing at Rutgers Was Ever Easy
      15 Crisis, 1961
      16 Faith and Reason
      17 Score Once More, 1965
      18 The Inflection Point, 1965
      19 The Silent Steinway, 1965
      20 The Jewel in the Crown
      21 The Year Everything Went Wrong, 1968
      22 Law and Order, 1968
      23 Faith and Reason v. Law and Order
      24 June 1970
      25 Complicated, 1971
      26 Guggenheim, 1972
      27 The Door Opens, Then Closes Tight, 1975–1977
      28 The Last Post, 1977
      29 The Hope That Lies within You, 2020
      Appendix: Personal Histories, Correspondence, Reminiscences, and Interviews
      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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