The 1944-45 budget file for the department of economics consists of a three page spreadsheet, is followed by fifteen pages of line item justifications for changes signed by the chairman of the department Simeon E. Leland and a one page budget memorandum by the assistant comptroller (Lincicome) to the Vice President (Filbey). This is an informationally rich document.
For this posting I have converted the item rows of the budget spreadsheet into individual columns for the items. The separate items have then been paired with the line item justifications.
An excerpt from a 1945 development plan by Chairman Leland for the department has been transcribed and posted.
___________________________________
Named in the Instructional Budget, 1944-45
McGuire, Christine H. (Mrs. Jules Masserman)
___________________________________
The University of Chicago
Budget and Appointment Recommendations
1944-45
Division of the Social Sciences
Department of Economics
February 21, 1944
Departmental Recommendations
In presenting the Budget for 1944-45, I am transmitting the recommendations of the Professors in the Department of Economics as decided upon at their meeting February 15, 1944. The specific recommendations, save as to dissents where their own welfare was involved, were unanimous. For convenience, the recommendations are presented in two divisions: (I) The college; (II) The Department. An attempt is also made to consider problems of the future development of the Department.
- The College
Recommendations concerning those members of the College staff who have status in the Department will be appended hereto when they are received from Dean Faust. As in the past, the Department has no responsibility in connection with the College and hence does not assume responsibility for recommendations in the College. The Department is glad to incorporate in its budget or transmit through customary channels any recommendations Dean Faust desires to make.
- The Department
The recommendations of the Professors in the Department can be classified under four convenient headings: (A) Advancements in Rank and Increases in Salaries Related Thereto; (B) Recommendations as to Changes in Salaries; (C) Appointments ;(D) Future Development of the Department; (E) Recommendations as to Service and Equipment.
Instructional Budget Account
| Item No. | 1-20 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
|||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $54,600) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $65,550) | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [….] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Items requiring no change
in rank or salary
Professor Jacob Viner
| Item No. | 1 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Viner, Jacob, Prof. | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $10,000 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $10,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Professor T. W. Schultz
| Item No. | 4 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Schultz, T.W., Prof. | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $9,000 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $9,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Professor Jacob Marschak
| Item No. | 6 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Marschak, Jacob, Prof. ([Paid by] Commission |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Dec…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 [in Economics] 4 [in Cowles] |
||
| If part-time, approx. % | 50% [Economics] 50% [Cowles] |
||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $7,500 Total From Economics $3,750 From Cowles $3,750 |
||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $7,500 Total From Economics $3,750 From Cowles, $3,750 |
||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Professor Paul H. Douglas
| Item No. | 7 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Douglas, P.H., Prof. (On leave, 10/1/42—enlisted) |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | ($7,000) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | ($7,000) | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Assistant Professor Frederick H. Harbison
| Item No. | 13 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Harbison, F. H., Asst. Prof. (On leave [to 9/30/44] Government Service) |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept. 45 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | ($4,000) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $4,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [4,000] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
- Advancements in Rank and Increases in Salaries Related Thereto
[Note: All departmental recommendations for an advancement in rank were rejected by the President’s Office.]
___________________________________
Associate Professor Lloyd W. Mints
[11] The Department recommends that the rank of Lloyd W. Mints be changed from Associate Professor to Professor of Economics. Mr. Mints has been a member of the staff since 1920, rising successively from Instructor to Assistant Professor to Associate Professor. He has earned the respect of students and colleagues for the thoroughness of his teaching and for his insight into economic and monetary theory. He has been a willing worker and has carried a heavy load of administrative routine for many years in connection with the advising of students. The Department has considered this recommendation on several occasions within the last few years and expected to make the recommendation at a time when Mints’ book on A History of Banking Theory would appear. Through no fault of his own the publication of this work — the fruition of several years’ research — has been delayed due to the war and the shortage of paper. Harper and Brothers have the manuscript in their possession and have agreed to publish it, but because of market difficulties plus rationing of paper stocks actual publication will probably be postponed for some time. It does not seem fair to delay this promotion in hope of finding a strategic occasion for its presentation. If one looks ahead to retirement and the possibility of accumulating a satisfactory annuity, the earlier this promotion is given the greater will be its worth to Mr. Mints. On the other hand, delay may tend to impair morale and produce discouragement, especially when the length of Mints’s service to the University is considered. It is recommended that Mr. Mints’s salary be increased $1,000.
| Item No. | 11 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Mints, L. W., Prof. (Assoc. Prof.) |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept. 45 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 10/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | [Ind] | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $4,000 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $5,000 | ||
| Dean | Ac. Prof. | ||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$4,500] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Associate Professor Henry C. Simons
[10] The Department recommends the promotion of Henry C. Simons from Associate Professor to Professor of Economics. Simons has earned the reputation here and among his peers at other institutions of being a brilliant economist. His powers of theoretical analysis are equaled by few men: his scintillating suggestions as to public policy in the fields in which he has written have been widely recognized and favorably quoted; his writings have an originality and style which matches the subjective contributions of his works. Simons’ opinions on many economic subjects are eagerly sought. The Department recommends that his salary be increased $1,500. The recommendations as to advancement in rank and increase in salary will also be supported by the Law School, to which Simons devotes ono-third of his time.
See the Law School recommendations, Item 12. Since the present contract for the Civil Affairs Training Program does not extend throughout the year 1944-45, provision must be made in the regular budget for the salary if a new appointment is to be made from the budget.
| Item No. | 10 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Simons, H.C., Prof. |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 10/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | [Ind] | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | 67 (Econ.) 33 (Law School) |
||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 |
$4,500 (Total) $3,000 (Econ.) |
||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $6,000 $4,000 (Econ.) $2,000 (Law School) |
||
| Dean | [Ac. Prof] | ||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | [Ac. Prof] | ||
| Salary Level | [$5,000 (Total)] [$3,333 (Econ.)] [$1,667 (Law School]) |
||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Instructor H. Gregg Lewis
[14] The Department proposes that H. Gregg Lewis be promoted from Instructor to Assistant Professor and that his salary be increased $500, effective upon his return to the University at the close of the war. His work merits this recognition. By the time he returns, it is believed that Lewis will have received his Ph.D. His dissertation is in final stages of preparation.
The leave must be extended if the salary is not to be included in the budget totals.
| Item No. | 14 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Lewis, H. G. Asst. Prof. (Instructor) |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept. 44 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 10/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | 3 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | ($3,500) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | ($4,000) | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | [Instructor] | ||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | [$4,000] | ||
___________________________________
Lecturer Robert K. Burns
[15] The Department desires to recommend the appointment of Robert K. Burns as Assistant Professor, to serve the University on a half-time basis at a stipend of $2,000 per annum. Burns, who holds the title of Lecturer, has carried the bulk of the work of the Department in the field of labor during the past two years. Not only has he carried a heavy instructional load but he has supervised class research, and dissertations as well. Burns has been Regional Director of the War Labor Board in Chicago and has recently been transferred to the Washington office to direct certain new activities of the Board. This promotion came as a recognition of outstanding work. How soon Burns could assume increased responsibilities in the University is not known, but any time his services can be made available the Department is in a position to utilize them effectively. With Harbison and Douglas also in the field of labor, it is believed that a half-time appointment for Burns is all that is now required.
| Item No. | 15 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Burns, R. E., Asst Prof. (Lecturer, part time). |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | June, 44 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 7/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | 3 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | 50 | ||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $1,400 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $2,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | [Lect] | ||
| Salary Level | [$2000] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
- Changes in Salaries
Professor Frank H. Knight
[2] The Department, over the protest of Frank H. Knight, recommends to the Division that Knight’s salary be increased $1,500 so as to place his compensation on the $10,000 level. If a Distinguished Professorship is available, Knight should receive it; if such a Professorship is unavailable, Knight should receive a stipend as though he were so honored. He is known throughout the world as one of its outstanding economists. His reputation and scholarship extend to the fields of philosophy, ethics, religion, and history, to name but a few. His fellow economists have honored him on many occasions; he has represented them for many years on learned societies. He has been tempted with offers from other institutions. He has been made a Professor of the Social Sciences in recognition of the breadth of his competence. Honor is bestowed on him everywhere; only the University can give him the freedom from financial ills he sorely needs and deserves. His present salary is an embarrassment to the Department, even though it is all charged against the Division.
| Item No. | 2 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Knight, F. H., Prof. (also Soc.Sci.Div.Instr. |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | June…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $8,500 From Econ. …. From Soc.Sci.Div. $8,500 |
||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $10,000 From Econ. …. From Soc.Sci.Div. $10,000 |
||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | From Soc.Sci.Div. [$9,000) 4] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Professor John U. Nef
[5] The Department would like to recommend an increase in salary of $1,000 for John U. Nef, but Nef says that he will not hear of it nor accept an increase in compensation. The Department believes that such an increase is well deserved and wants its recommendation to be recorded even if Mr. Nef declines to receive what is manifestly his due.
| Item No. | 5 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Nef, J.H., Prof. (also History |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | [10/1/44] | ||
| Yrs. | [Ind] | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 [in Economics and History] | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | 50% [Economics] 50% [History] |
||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $7,500 Total From Econ. $3,750 From Hist. $3,750 |
||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $8,500 Total From Econ. $4,750 From Hist., $3,750 |
||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$8,000 Total] [From Econ. $4,250] [From Hist. $3,750 (4] |
||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Professor Oscar Lange
[9] The Department recommends an increase in salary of $500 for Oscar Lange. When Lange returned to the University of Chicago after a year’s leave at Columbia, he did so at a distinct financial sacrifice. Any continuation of that disadvantage should be removed. It is the opinion of the Department, too, that Simons and Lange should be treated equally with respect to salary and rank. In view of the salary proposed for Mr. Simons, this increase is doubly appropriate.
| Item No. | 9 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Lange, Oscar, Prof. | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | June…. | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | [7/1/44] | ||
| Yrs. | [Ind] | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $5,500 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $6,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$6000] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
- Appointments
Professor Simeon E. Leland
The new appointment information should be inserted for the position of Chairman.
| Item No. | 3 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Leland, S.E., Prof. and Chairman (also Political Sci. |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. |
June…. [As Chairman Jun 44] |
||
| New appointment | |||
| From | [7-1-44] [As chairman 7-1-44] |
||
| Yrs. | Ind [as Prof] 3 yrs [as chairman] |
||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 [in Economics and Pol. Sci.] | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | 50% [Economics] 50% [Political Sci.] |
||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $8,000 Total From Econ. $4,000 From Pol.Sci. $4,000 |
||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $8,000 Total From Econ. $4,000 From Pol.Sci. $4,000 |
||
| Dean | $9,000 Total From Econ. $4,500 From Pol.Sci. $4,500 |
||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$9,000 Total] [From Econ. $4,500] [From Pol.Sci. $4,500 (4] |
||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Professor Chester W. Wright
[8] At the end of the present year Chester W. Wright becomes Professor Emeritus. Up to the present time the Department has been unable to fill Professor Wright’s post. Outstanding scholars of American Economic History are few; promising young men are scarce. Professor Wright’s health and energy are unimpaired. He is at the peak of his career. His recently completed Economic History of the United States is an outstanding achievement. The Department believes that Professor Wright should be invited to remain at the University during the coming year on a half-time basis. The continuance of his work and his presence here will make easier the finding as well as the appointment of a successor. As long aa Professor Wright is in the city the University will be the beneficiary of his work on Library acquisitions. His painstaking labors in the Library over a period of years is reflected in the excellence of the collections of books in Economics and Social Sciences — collections which include rare books, historic volumes and current issues, making our Library one of the best of university libraries.
The desirability of the renewal of Professor Wright’s appointment is strengthened by the fact that Mr. Harold Innis of the University of Toronto, to whom a Professorship in the Department has been offered, has declined our offer for the duration due to his feeling of responsibility toward his own institution in the present emergency. Innis has indicated that when the war is over he will be glad to reconsider our offer. Due also to his great regard for Professor Wright, the renewal of Wright’s appointment for the duration (on a year-to-year basis, as may be required) will be an important factor in inducing Innis to come to the University of Chicago. Probably more than any one person, Wright may be able eventually to induce Innis to join the staff.
If Innis does come to the University of Chicago, he will doubtless wish to devote his attention to Canadian economic history and only gradually devote his energies to continental developments. It will be necessary, therefore, to bring in a young man to teach United States economic history. As has been indicated, promising candidates are hard to find and the Department is unable to recommend a person for appointment at this time. Both Professors Wright and Nef emphasize the difficulties of this task. And, if a recommendation is to be made, the candidate must enjoy the support of senior professors in this field. All of which strengthens the recommendation of the Department for the continuance of Professor Wright’s teaching.
Is the proposed salary to be in addition to the retiring allowance at $3,000 per year?
| Item No. | 8 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Wright, C. W., Prof. Emer. (Prof.) [(also Retiring Allowance (Total Salary] |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Sept. 44 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | [10/1/44] | ||
| Yrs. | 1 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 3 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | 50 | ||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $6,500 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $3,250 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | [Retire 10/1/44] | ||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | [$1625] | ||
___________________________________
Instructor Henry S. Bloch
[16] It is recommended that the appointment of Henry S. Bloch as instructor be renewed. Bloch at present is devoting his time exclusively to the CATS program, where his salary is charged. Should that training program be liquidated, Bloch’s services can be transferred immediately to Departmental teaching, research, and assistance in advising students. During the past year such needs have arisen, but because of the demands of the military program Bloch has not been able to assist the Department in its civilian program. Attention is called to the fact that Bloch’s salary is on a four-quarter basis.
Our payroll department states that the present appointment for Mr. Bloch at $2,200 per year is charged to the Economics budget and expires June 30, 1944. There is no record of the appointment chargeable to the Civil Affairs Specialists Training Program. Will you please check your records. Also, since the Training Program contract does not cover 1944-45, it is assumed that any salary for next year must be included in the department totals.
| Item No. | 16 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Bloch, H. S., Inst. (also CATS). |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | 9/30/44 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 10/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | 1 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 4 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $3,600 (CATS) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $3,600 (CATS) | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$3,600 (CATS)] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Visiting Professor D. H. Buchanan
[12] D. H. Buchanan of the University of North Carolina is a Visiting Professor assisting in the military training program of the University. It is our understanding that his appointment is for the duration or during the continuance of the military training program. Mr. Buchanan’s salary has been charged against the CATS budget and I presume his appointment will continue at the same rate and so long as this program continues. Buchanan is included in this budget only for the sake of completeness.
| Item No. | 12 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Buchanan, D. H., Vis. Prof. (also CATS |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | Aug. 44 | ||
| New appointment | 9/1/44 (CATS) | ||
| From | 10/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | 1 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 4 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $8,000 (CATS) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $8,000 (CATS) | ||
| Dean |
[Do not appoint] [illegible word] |
||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Research Associate Gale Johnson
[18] The appointment of Gale Johnson as a Research Associate in Agricultural Economics at a four-quarter stipend of $3,700 was recommended during the current year to provide research assistance for Professor T. W. Schultz. Johnson’s appointment will commence as of April 1, 1944.
| Item No. | 18 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Johnson, Gale, Res.Assoc. in Agri. Economics | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | 6/30/44 | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 7/1/44 | ||
| Yrs. | 1 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 4 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $3,700 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $3,700 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Lecturer John K. Langum
[17] The Department recommends the appointment of John K. Langum, Vice President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago in charge of the Bank’s economic research and statistics, as Lecturer in Banking and Banking Policy. The Department would like to appoint Langum as a Lecturer, with the expectation that the arrangement would continue for many years to the mutual advantage of both institutions. A stipend of $500 is proposed, in return for which Langum would be invited during two Quarters of the academic year to give a seminar or series of evening lectures on current topics in banking and banking policy. These lectures should greatly strengthen the work of the University in the field of banking, a defect in our training and research of which we have long been cognizant. We are anxious to make the appointment at an early date, but will make the expenditure of funds contingent upon adequacy of registrations.
The Langum appointment should bring credit to the University. He is well and favorably known in economic and banking circles. He holds his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota. He is the author of numerous articles in his field. Recently he has prepared a monograph which the Committee on Economic Development is to publish.
| Item No. | 17 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Langum, J.K., Lecturer | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | 1/1/45 (Winter and Spring Quarters) | ||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 2 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | Pt. | ||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | |||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $500 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$500] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Items 12a, 13a, 15, 1, and 16a are inserted since the individuals have appointments extending beyond June 30, 1944.
Professor Maynard C. Krueger
| Item No. | [12a] | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
[Krueger, M. C. As Prof. (also College] |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | [Sept. 44] | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | [$4,000] | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | [$4,000) 4] | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$4,000] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
Assistant Prof. Gerhard E.O. Meyer
| Item No. | [13a] | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
[Meyer, G.E.O. As. Prof. (also College] |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | [Sept. 44] | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | [$2,700] | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | [$3,500) 4] | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$4,000] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
From the spreadsheet it is not clear about the breakdown of source of funding between the Department of Economics and the College.
___________________________________
Instructor/Dean of Students Christine McGuire Masserman
Note: items 15a and 16a refer to the same person. Christine H. McGuire (who married the psychiatrist Jules H. Masserman). Christine H. McGuire is listed in the U.S. National Register of Scientific and Technical Personnel, 1921-1970 as having received a master’s degree in 1938. She later moved from teaching economics to
| Item No. | [15a] | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
[McGuire, Christine (Mrs. Jules H. Masserman), Inst. (also College and Dean of Students] |
||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | [Sept 44] | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | 1 | ||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | 4 | ||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | [$2,000 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | |||
| Dean | [$2,000 Total College (?) $1,500 )4 Economics (?) $500)4] |
||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$2,000 Total College (?) $1,500 )4 Economics (?) $500)4] |
||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
Instructor C. H. Masserman
| Item No. | 16a | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
[Masserman, H. H., Inst.] | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | [Sept 44] | ||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | [$2,000] | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | |||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
___________________________________
- The Future Development of the Department
From time to time the Department has called attention to its future needs. It has appraised its deficiencies and has projected problems certain to arise with the retirement of its staff. Some of the problems are still unsolved; one has been solved with brilliance and good fortune.
1. Agriculture
During the past year one of the long standing weaknesses of the Department was cured with the appointment of T. W. Schultz as Professor of Agricultural Economics. With his coming, two important developments can be undertaken. First, a plan for joint degrees in Agricultural Economics cooperatively undertaken by a few selected land grant colleges can be developed. Already we are negotiating with Purdue University to see if we can agree on the details and administration of such a plan. Second, we hope to introduce Agricultural Economics as a field to be studied by undergraduates in the typical four-year college program. At the present time economics departments throughout the country do not call the attention of students to the problems of agriculture either in the so-called “applied economics” courses or in their general survey courses. This is partly due to the fact of specialization, in which work in agriculture and in agricultural economics has been developed almost exclusively in the land grant colleges. It is also due to the fact that few students as part of their graduate education have been exposed to courses In Agricultural Economics. The Department is offering courses in Agricultural Economics to students as part of a general educational program and as part of their training for advanced degrees. Eventually this should bring to the student in urban colleges of liberal arts, where our students are employed, a better understanding of the problems of agriculture. Sooner or later the general courses in economics should deal with agricultural questions just as they now give attention, for example, to the problems of labor, capital, transportation, taxation, or business organization. It is believed that our Department is pioneering in this field, thanks to the active support and encouragement of the University.
2. Transportation
In times past the Department has called attention to the need for strengthening the work offered in Railroads and Transportation. Chicago is the strategic place for the development of advanced training and research in these related fields. It is the railroad center of the United States; it is its central airport; it is a dominant market for railroad equipment and supplies, and during the war has become an important airplane parts manufacturing center. Motor bus and truck-line activities teem in and around Chicago. To meet this opportunity, the University boasts of but one professor whose interests are largely centered in railroad freight rates and who in recent years has typically been on leave. More emphasis in the future should be given to transportation by motor vehicles and airplanes. A major professorial appointment should be contemplated in the field of transportation.
3. Trusts and Monopolies
The retirement of Professor Wright raises the question as to what should be done with respect to teaching and research in the field of Trusts, Monopolies and Business Combinations. Once each year Professor Wright has given a course in Trusts which from the point of view of training of graduate students has been adequate. The decrease in student enrollment during the war has not made the problem critical. The renewal of Professor Wright’s appointment will solve the question for another year.
The field of Trusts alone is not one of sufficient importance, It is believed, to justify a full-time staff appointment. It could easily be combined with Public Utilities or the Control of Business, depending upon the interests of possible candidates for appointment, but some provision should be made to cover this field in the near future.
4. Public Utilities and Control of Business
The offerings of the Department in the field of Public Utilities has been scant, if courses and research over the years are listed. This is true even if the offerings of other Departments and Schools are taken into account. Prior to the depression, efforts were made to make a professorial appointment in this field. Unfortunately, the nominees of the Department could not be induced to join the faculty. Visiting professors were employed on several occasions but with the advent of the depression this practice had to be discontinued. It may be doubted whether Public Utilities is as important a field as it was over a decade ago. Emphasis now has shifted to the Control of Business, with the regulation of public utilities, the dissolution of trusts and the reduction of competition as phases of larger general problems. The control of business by government (and perhaps by other institutions) has long been of interest to economists and political scientists, as well as business men. It has likewise been the concern of lawyers.
The field is of increasing importance in the future. An outstanding professorial appointment would greatly strengthen the University as a whole.
5. Advanced Statistical Theory
In proposing a joint professorship with the Mathematics Department for Professor Abraham Wald, the Department gave expression to a long-felt desire to expand the work of the University in the field of advanced mathematical theory as applied to statistics. Such an appointment with mathematical advice and consultation available to the faculty on their own research and teaching problems would be invaluable. On the whole, the training of students is secondary to this need and service. By such an appointment our research could be strengthened greatly. It offers the opportunity, too, to develop graduate work in the field of statistics far beyond present limits. It is believed that this view and this conception is shared by the Mathematics Department.
As a matter of University policy a closer integration of courses, training and research in the field of statistics would seem to be desirable. The Institute of Statistics has made progress in this direction. More and more the foundations and advanced training in the field should center in the Mathematics Department, with applications being taught in other Departments and Schools. A major appointment such as the one proposed for Wald would strengthen and facilitate these developments.
Although Wald declined our offer, the Department hopes to join Mr. Bartky, Professor of Applied Mathematics, Associate Dean and Dean of Students in the Division of the Physical Sciences and Chairman of the Institute of Statistics, and Mr. Lane, Chairman of the Department of Mathematics, in presenting another recommendation for an outstanding appointment in this field. Such an appointment is a University need which the Department of Economics shares. The Department will help in any way it can to bring about a noteworthy appointment.
6. Joint Appointments with Other Departments
In suggesting appointments in the fields of Trusts and Monopolies, Railroads and Transportation, Public Utilities and the Control of Business, Advanced Mathematical and Statistical Theory, the Department is cognizant of the fact that University resources are limited and that at any time only the most urgent or most important things can be done. Other Departments and Schools, as well as our own, have problems and claims for financial support. Without attempting to weigh the importance of alternative claims or uses for funds, the recommendations of the Department have been made because we think they are important. They represent a portion of a program oriented toward the future.
In making the suggestions enumerated, appointments to the Department of Economics are not being urged per se. Most of the problems also concern other Departments and Schools. In these fields joint appointments are in order. Thereby other parts of the University as well as our own Department would be strengthened. An appointment in Trusts and Monopolies concerns both the Law School and the Department of Political Science, as well as Economics; Railroads and Transportation also concerns the School of Business; Public Utilities and Control of Business should involve Law, Political Science, Business, and Economics; Urban Planning involves the Departments of Geography, Political Science, Economics and the Schools of Law and Business; Social Legislation affects Social Service Administration, Law and Economics. If the University is interested in furthering this suggested development, the Department is ready to take the initiative. Joint appointments will help us improve our Department, its research and teaching.
7. Visiting Professors
Whenever a need arises or a deficiency becomes evident, the easy solution is to suggest “an outstanding appointment.” This may also be the most costly solution even though it may temporarily increase the size, the number of course offerings or the ego of particular departments. It tends to increase the emphasis on less important aspects of particular branches of knowledge. It expends the applications, or the applied courses, rather than the basic elements of theory or science. The growth and strength of certain departments may be increased by concentrating on the development of the fundamental aspects of their subject matter by the regular full-time members of their faculty and by funds spent on increasing the eminence of this central group, the requisite diversification of teaching or research being secured by means of visiting professorships, continuously utilized to cover first one peripheral subject and then another. By bringing to the Department various men for one or two quarters a year, the best they have to offer both in instruction of students and stimulation of faculty colleagues can be secured at relatively low cost. As different men are brought to the Department the gains from this policy can be extended first to one field and then to another. If it is pursued regularly, it will soon become a tradition that new people with unique contributions to supplement those of the regular staff are always in residence in the Department of Economies at the University of Chicago. The Visiting Professorships should be chosen quite as much for their ability to stimulate and educate their faculty colleagues as to enrich the graduate program, though it is hard to see how one could take place without the other.
Next year may not be the time to inaugurate this policy due to difficulties connected with the war and the possible decrease in exceptional graduate students who would profit most from it, but it is urged that the plan be given a careful trial over a period of several years, within which the Department be allowed to experiment freely to see what could be accomplished. It is suggested that $5,000 per annum be placed at the disposal of the Department for 3 to 5 years to see what it can do for itself and the University in the execution of this policy. If it can not demonstrate the gains from this policy, it should be held to account for its failure.
8. Departmental Lectures
A similar line of thought prompts the Department to ask in addition for the sum of $600 per annum for expenditure on occasional lectures to be given by individuals doing new and unique things about which staff members and their best students would otherwise remain ignorant. Such lectures would have little popular appeal and would attract few outside of the Department, but they would give the faculty the benefit of discoveries, hypotheses an ideas before they become current in the profession. Such Iectures could find their way into print via the Journal of Political Economy, Econometrica, or otherwise, as might be determined. The $600 requested would probably provide only two or three such lectures a year due to the payment of expenses and honoraria.
9. A Special Fund for Student Assistance
The suggestion has been made that there be included among the worthy projects to be submitted to prospective donors proposals for the creation of Departmental Funds for the Assistance of Brilliant Students, such as the Littauer Fund now available at Harvard. This would not be a loan fund but a source of grants-in-aid to supplement fellowships, scholarships, loans and other assistance and would be administered by the respective departments which are close to students, and are, therefore, familiar with their needs. A study of the results attained by the Littauer Center might well justify the search for a similar fund.
- Recommendations as to Service and Equipment
The Department is unanimous in recommending an increase in salary of at least $35.00 per month for Mrs. Margaret Finnamore who by vote of the faculty has been acting as Secretary of the Department. If it is possible to have this title confirmed and a new salary classification adopted so as to give effect to the work now being performed by Mrs. Finnamore, the wishes of the Department will be carried out. [“]In running the Department, Mrs. Finnamore is the most essential person.”
The Department feels that it is appropriate to increase the salary of Mrs. Marian Woodyard from $145 to $150 per month.
With the continued increase in members of the Department and the increase in their scholarly output, present clerical and stenographic facilities are inadequate. The situation was eased somewhat last year by the addition of $500 to our Equipment and Expense Account. This sum has been utilized to provide additional typing service for staff members but the need can only be met by the addition of one full-time clerk-stenographer. To provide this assistance and to take care of the salary changes recommended above an increase of $2,040 is needed in our Service Account. (I have reduced our Equipment and Expense Account by $500.)
| Item No. | 21 | ||
| Account No. | 2624 Service | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
|||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $3,960) | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $6,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [$6,000] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
Equipment and Expense
| Item No. | 22 | ||
| Account No. | 2625 Equipment and Expense | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
|||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $1,360 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $860 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
An independent check on the present volume of office and stenographic work, as well as its work-program for the future, would be welcomed to test the reasonableness of this recommendation.
Respectfully submitted,
[signed] Simeon E. Leland
___________________________________
Three items crossed out of economics departmental budget by President
Visiting Professors
| Item No. | 19 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Visiting Professors | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | |||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $600 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [….] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
Lecturers
| Item No. | 20 | ||
| Account No. | 2621 Instruction | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
Lecturers | ||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | |||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $5,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | [….] | ||
| Amount 1944-45 | |||
Agricultural Economic Research & Development
| Item No. | 23 | ||
| Account No. | 2626 Agricultural Economic Research & Development | ||
| Name and Proposed Rank (Old rank in parenthesis if change recommended) |
|||
| Tenure | |||
| Present Expira. | |||
| New appointment | |||
| From | |||
| Yrs. | |||
| Service Basis | |||
| Number of quarters | |||
| If part-time, approx. % | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| 1943-44 | $5,000 | ||
| Proposed | |||
| Chairman | $5,000 | ||
| Dean | |||
| President’s Recommendation | |||
| Rank | |||
| Salary Level | |||
| Amount 1944-45 | [In Division Budget] | ||
___________________________________
Source: University of Chicago Library. Department of Special Collections. Office of the President. Hutchins Administration Records. Box 284, Folder “Economics, 1943-1947”.
Image Source: Portrait of Simeon E. Leland. University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf1-03716, Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library. Image colorized by Economics in the Rear-view Mirror.