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Education: Booming Redbricks
For centuries, caste-bound Britain regarded higher learning as a rite of the rich and a privilege of the few. Even by 1945, only one-tenth of 1% of the population attended universitiesmainly the well born, who "went up" to Oxford and Cambridge and on to the "Establishment" that runs English culture and politics. But in 1948 came a dramatic change: for any poor youngster with a rich mind, Britain's welfare state promised a free university education through a vast system of scholarships. "For the first time," recalls Eton's Headmaster Robert Birley, "the working class realized that universities belonged just as much to it as to the 'others.' "
The result is a race for college more intense than the current U.S. competition. Though enrollment is still only two-tenths of 1% of the population (v. 2% in the U.S.), it has more than doubled since 1948, to 103,000; in four years, it may hit 175,000. "Oxbridge" has opened few doors. Shouldering almost the entire weight of the new students are Britain's 15 "redbrick" universities, the shirtsleeve provincial schools that got their name from the red bricks with which most of them were built when they began as seedy local colleges in the late 19th century.
Padded Cells. Sprouting between steel mills and shipyards, in grimy Liverpool, Manchester or Nottingham, redbricks* were originally founded to nurture local talents. Amenities were few: Leicester's main building (sooty yellow brick) was once the county asylum; the library still has padded cells. Redbrick graduates, generally 9-to-5 commuter students with no chance for donnish tea and tutorials, were hardly considered "educated"though they included such talents as Novelists D. H. Lawrence (Nottingham) and C. P. Snow (Leicester). Oxbridge so scorned the breed that to this day it insists on calling redbrick Ph.D.s "Mr."
Now full-scale national universities, redbricks are so besieged that they can accept only one out of seven applicants. Desperately, they are building airy glass-and-steel buildings without a single red brickcenters for chemistry at Leicester and Birmingham, for physics at Hull, for engineering at Liverpool. Entire new universities are due in Brighton, York and Norwich; four more are on paper from Coventry to Canterbury. Last week, Lancashire joined the queue of counties that want their own universities.
Something Missing. Redbricks have already surged ahead in many fields. Oxbridge has nothing like Manchester's electrical-engineering course. Bristol's physics and English are tops; so is metallurgy at Birmingham. Many redbrick universities are superior in modern languages, and three of them have chairs in modern American literature. "At Oxbridge," sniffs one schoolmaster, "they teach such rarefied English literature that only recently have they reached 1900."
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