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Miller Upton
Political freedom, the rule of law, and voluntary exchange
Miller Upton was the sixth president of Beloit College and the architect of the historic Beloit Plan of year-round education. As a 1938 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Tulane University and former dean of the School of Business and Public Administration at Washington University, he devoted his career to advancing the ideals of the liberal society: political freedom, the rule of law, and the promotion of peace and prosperity through the voluntary exchange of goods, services, and ideas.
To him, transforming those ideals into real institutions was at the heart of increasing the wealth and well-being of nations. Known as an educator and a recognized expert in the academic specialties of business administration, finance, and money and banking, he also served as a member of many national committees and governmental commissions in his field, including the chairmanship of the United States National Commission for UNESCO. President Upton’s administration at Beloit was marked by a series of far-reaching curricular changes that define the character of the college to this day.