Project Nemesis is a fan driven website for games that use the One-Roll Engine (like Nemesis, Wild Talents, Reign and Monsters) or Chaosium's Basic Roleplay System (BRP) (like Call of Cthulhu) and the Delta Green setting.
Miskatonic's darkest days were in the 1930s.
Depression gripped the nation and MU was not spared, particularly after
not one but two disastrous Antarctic expeditions. But the school
survived by biting the bullet.
It cut all adjunct and assistant
faculty. reduced the range of courses offered. Cut library hours and
medical services for the campus. Eliminated eighty percent of dormitory
housing. Then, having created these obviously dire straits, the
adminstration turned to the foundation and said "Get donations!" And Miskatonic tapped the deep pockets of alumni and their
families by using their own austerity measures as evidence of their
need.
The greatest fortunes of the last fifty years had not been
seriously impacted and grants poured in allowing MU to expand back to
what it had been, and, more importantly, established the
Miskatonic-Armitage Trust which is an independent investment fund that
manages unexpended donation monies and other profits which has allowed
Miskatonic to expand rapidly in recent decades to remain both a
competitive Ivy League institution and a relevant force in modern
post-secondary education. Miskatonic received considerable government funds for various
technological/hard science projects during WWII and was a major
beneficiary of the post war GI Bill. During the bonus years of the late
forties through mid-sixties new alums made their own donations and
endowments while the school also grew rich through its shared credit
policy regarding IP developed at the school and through the prestige it
accumulated through the recruitment of world-class scholars in the
realm of the hard sciences and in Liberal Arts and Language studies.
Sixties student radicalism did come to the campus, but President
Phillips was progressive and quickly implemented policies that
surrendered the University's in loco parentis
role and formally instituted a policy respecting students' first
amendment rights. He was also responsible for Miskatonic's landmark
efforts at recruiting students from minority backgrounds and
establishing Women's and Minority Studies programs. he even dismantled
MU security service and invited the Massachussetts' State Police to
establish a campus headquarters and take over those duties. The last
may not have been his best plan, it was some years before this forced
accepted that certain draconian policies were not effective in a
collegiate environment.
While Phillips' conciliatory attitude did prevent much of the
outright violence that occured at other institutions of higher learning
around the country, they also encouraged the students whose various
initiatives did result in many programs of questionable academic value
to be established, some of which survived until the mid 1990s. This
gave MU a bit of a reputation as a school where it was possible to get
by without a great deal of dedication to education. But since it also
had several outstanding programs that reputation remained mixed and
certainly doesn't apply today. Phillips' successors each followed a
strict program of trying to exterminate the more "radical" educational
follies he had approved (and perhaps even encouraged).
The Mythos at MU is fairly subdued. The University is not at the
center of Arkham mythos activities though it is a place where many
resources are gathered together (and might be used by either
investigators or cultists). Its most significant mythos connection is
its rare book collections, but the books that were under lock and key
seventy years ago are even more closely guarded now and are generally
viewed as exhausted academic resources that had been fully explored by
Henry Armitage and his contemporaries. The mythos part of the
collections has not expanded since Armitage's death in '33. Other
mythos books might be in the library but no one has recognized them for
what they are and attempted to catalog them together much less isolate
them or remove them from circulation.