Feature Section i:l . r ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SU [;AY, APRIL 26, 1925 ~Iaii4 Feature Section EIGHT PAGES VOL. XXXV. No. 151 UNIVERSITIES Y STATE POLITICS OItt Glenn Frank, Editor of Century Magazine, Writes on One Phase of His Topic At Michigan's 1924 Co Exercises , The Problem of Combining Knowledge With Power is Treated in Article nmencement Quoted from May Century Extensive Decentralization of Affairs Needed . . rV By Glenn Frank ' Editor's Note: The following article, entitled "State Universities in State Politics", was written by Glenn Frank, editor of the Century magazine, who spoke at the commencement exercises here last year. The editorial is reprinted from the May, 1925 num- ber of the Century.) * *.* Last summer, at the University pf Michigan, I dis- cussed, in all too fugitive a fashion, the sort of rela-. tion between university, church, and state, that would, in my judgment, make for the most virile and veracious national life. In this paper I want to set down tentatively cer- tain considerations regarding one angle of this problem, namely, the relation of our state univer- sities to our state governments. In the Michigan address I emphasized the fact that university and church and state are engaged in a common enterprise. "I dislike," I said, "to speak of education, religion, and politics as if they were three distinct fields. They are, or should be, an indivisible unit. Isolate any one of them from the other two, and it is orphaned and ineffec- tive. . . . The professor, the parson, and the poli- tician are at work on the same job, not on three separate jobs. And that job is the achievement of 'the good life' for the citizen and for the nation." Ihsuggested, in addition that the unity of aim shared by these three cardinal institutions of so- ciety cannot be served by the successful attempt of one of the institutions to rule the roost by imposing on the other two its particular notions, thus turning the nation into a vast Shaker village, with a drab uniformity of outlook and action. "Now and then," I said, "the professor, the parson, and the politician can best cooperate by valiantly opposing one an- other. Times come when only out of a clash be- tween university and church and state can corrected vision and creative policy arise. But even in these hours of necessity opposition, university and church and state are engaged in a common task." These hours of necessity opposition come, how- ever, only intermittently, when society faces crises in the determination of policy. We need a technic of cooperation between university and state in those' long stretches of timewhenrthe life of society runs on at its normal pace, undisturbed by dramatic crises of policy. . The need of sustained cooperation between uni- versity and state is obvious. Certainly the state needs it. The present divorce between the theory and practice of politics must be ended somehow. It is not safe, as Dean Inge has suggested, to go on with the theory of government in the hands of scholars who have knowledge, but no power, and the practice of government in the hands of politicians who have power, but no knowledge. After all, the art of government consists in bringing knowledge and power into a working partnership. As I said in these columns last January, the politics of the future ought to be simply humanity's technic of bringing the world's knowledge to the service of the world's life. Politics should be the point at which knowledge meets life and becomes socially effective. Only so can we protect ourselves from the assaults of those catchwords, snap judgments, prejudices, passions, and special interests which, thief-like, in- fest the Jerico road of partizan politics. Politics needs a better underpinning of facts. Plitics needs more laboratory workers and fewer log-rollers. Theoretically, at least, a state university should be the rallying-ground and repository for the knowl- edge needed for the wise management of the life of the State. State government is the rallying- ground and repository for the power needed for the effective management of the life of the state. Ob- viously a state must contrive to harness both the power of the government and the knowledge of the university if it is to achieve "the good life" for its cItizens. A state dares not allow the knowledge of its university. to languish for lack of power, or permit the power of its government to run amuck for lack of knowledge. Then, too, it may well be that the university needs this sort of cooperation. Learning is most significant when its roots are set deeply in the soil of current life. The absentminded professor, walking about as a sort of human incubator in which great ideas are brought to life by some sort of spontaneous genera- tion, is a creation of the jester and the caricaturist. More and more education is finding its point of de- parture not in the past, but in the present. There are enough things in the day-to-day life of our Missouris, our Wisconsins, and our Michigans, things in which the students of these state universities are of necessity interested, things they can see and toich and handle. to serve as vivid points of de- a. working arrangement under which the experts of the university will be called upon to provide the politicians of the government with the knowledge they need in order to form realistic judgments upon the problems of state government. This, we may say, will put a fact basis under our politics and save our scholars from the subtle dampness of the cloister that has mildewed so many otherwise first- class minds. But because a need is obvious, it does not fol- low that meeting it is an easy enterprise. At the outset we are faced with a difficulty that is, perhaps, inherent in a democratic society. There is nothing to be gained by scouting the fact that the scholar is not the idol of democracy. The scholar finds the road to service to the state blocked by two things that have, at least up to date, characterized modern democracies. These two things are the jealousy of the majority and the tyranny of the majority. In the democracy, the majority is, and probably always will be, jealous of its superior men. It rarely elects its superior men to office save by acci- dent, or when a superior man succeeds in masking his essential superiority of mind by the slouch of his hat, the mountebankery of his manner, and a vernacular raciness of speech. Democracies appar- ently are not out looking for representatives who jority. The crowd hates the expert, and we may as well acknowledge that fact. In any democracy, the majority tends, and prob- ably always will tend, to exercise a tyranny over minority opinion. And the scholar who has greater reverence for a fact than for the past is pretty sure to turn up a minority opinion now and then. This, again, works against the scholar in politics. As I have said before, desipte the fact that the majority has never taken an advance step on its own initia- tive, despite the fact that the majority has always had to be prodded into progress by a minority, the majority still insists upon using the device of ma- jority rule for silencing controversy as well as for settling contests. The majority hates the man who thinks differently from it, and seeks to standardize thought, and we may as well asknowledge that fact. The scholar in politics starts with this dual handicap which lies in the mental habits of the electorate. And he faces still another handicap when he attempts to work side by side with thS politicians in a state government. For here he faces an inevit- able conflict between the scientific mind and the political mind. The scientific mind thinks from facts to policy; the political mind thinks from policy to facts. The scientific mind is sublimely indifferent to such catchwords and labels as "conservation" or "liberalism" or "radicalism." The political mind Glenn Frank, editor of the Century magazine, Michigan's 1924 commencement speaker, and author of this article. know more than the majority; they are looking for delegates who are nearly as possible like the ma- The C sJonbin an Inkwell Despite all rumors to the effect that no one on the campus ever more than perfunctorily glances at The Daily, communications continue to pour into the Press Building addressed to the editor of the paper for publication in the Camp lu' Opinion column. Dozens of letters a day are received, and as many as possible are published. There is nothing more gratifying to a newspaper office than to receive from readers criticism of methods and materials employed in the publication of their sheet. News- papers are for the public-not for the journalistic profession-and when readers will express their opinions, they make possible a more thorough pub- lic service on the part of the paper. It is the policy of The Daily to publish as many of the communications as space will permit, the se- lection being made with a view to which letters will prove of the greatest benefit to the campus as a whole. Some writers are bitterly grieved when they find that their work has not been printed, while others are frankly pleased with the oimission. Two letters, extracts fro mwhich follow, show the ex- tremes of the two types. "To the Editor: "You are more a friend to me than you realized when you handed my rabid communication to the janitor. . : . I never tried such a stunt before, and I childishly thought myself witty and sarcastic to say what I did. . ...' And so on, the letter proceeded to explain the reason for the earlier (now destroyed) manuscript. At the other extreme is a note which quite explains itself: "To the Editor: "I am 'wondering on what ground you rejected my letter for publication. I did not understand that you printing (thus, accurately, the letter) only those that suited your exact taste. "Of course I know it is your privilege to reject or receive letters in this way but I thought you used some moral standard as a test. Certain I do not think it just to deny a public answer to your criticisms..... One man, having written a particularly stinging rebuke which was published and replied to, followed his first letter with another from which the following paragraph is drawn: "I did not intend my original communication to The Daily for publication, or I would have request- ed that only my initials be used; I had no intention of "broadcasting libellous material"; I sought to reach no other ears or eyes than those of the men responsible for the policy of The Daily. I do not wish to pose as the avatar of some Quixotic course of conduct; I do not wish to be held up to view as the champion against whom The Daily may send its editorial shafts. So if any additional attention is to be given the matter, I wish to have my name and personality left out of it as much as possible.", , , , Criticisms of Daily style, grammar and proof- reading are continually pouring in, supplemented by a quantity of destructive comment which,*lacking in any element of recommended improvement, are of little purpose or use. The first of the following quotations (published, by the way, in the Campus "Your unwarranted publicity and stand concern- ing the question of women ,moking made the paper resemble in humor a comic sheet.... .Your effort for Christian unity would be welcomed if it had in it a single new idea -. . It is only a question of time before the Garg. quits and gives The Daily full sway as the campus humor publication. . . . . "If it were not for the daily bulletin we would have little excuse for buying The Daily except in order to get a good laugh." Referring to a story on the University power plant, one writer sent in these remarks which proved of benefit to the paper and to the reporter who wrote the original article. "Such ignorance would be ludicrous if it were not so pitiful. Of course the current in the Univer- sity line varies. . . . .But so does it in. the Edison line and every other one supplying general load. . . . "The movement of the clock depends upon the frequency of the system. Please tell me how the engineer can "speed up his power?" . .-. - " . . I am not sure whether the writer of that article attended any of the meetings of the conven- tion. I am inclined to think that he did not, and it is very evident that he holds several peculiar ideas. "In the first place the University of Michigan had nothing to do with the convention. . . . The fact that Ann Arbor is in the same place geographically as the University of Michigan is only an unfortunate circumstance. . ". .. . If you can offer anything really construc- tive in the way of criticism we would be very grate- ful. but please don't start razzing us until you find out what it's all about. . . . .' In lighter vein, but none the less beneficial for its lightness, comes this brief but pointed conmuni- cation which is reprinted in full. "I see by the papers: "What's a little thing like accuracy in the life of a newspaper man? What's the difference whose picture it is as long ag it's a picture, or whose name appears as long as it's a situation? I have surmised that the school publications set the stand- ard for accuracy but alas, I behold, in Tuesday's Daily the naive mistake of mixing the pictures of the retired minister of Zagloul Pasha and the new premier Ziwar Pasha. Who but a newspaper man would fail to recognize the features of our friend Zagloul? Such mistakes are not perpetrated on the innocent public by The Michigan Daily alone. In the Denver Times I note the picture of Benny Friedman, with the following inscription below it: New star looms on the horizon of the great Michigan Aggies." From a man with an idea to sell comes this sug- gestion: ". . .I have a suggestion to make to you as editor of The Daily. It is that you start a Crftlcs' Column called "The Daily's daily errors in English" (or some other equally appropriate name). I am fully convinced that, if you can find a student with a thorough grounding in English and a vein of humor that he could use for the most part in headings, such a column would be a great success. Any reader would be eligible to send in criticisms, but they would have to be up to date, not more than two or three days old at most. . . . . If you publish this communication, please be sure that the proof-reading is accurate, so that I may not be the first victim of my own sugges- tion...... And now to enter the field of criticizing the critics of music, drama, and literature. A flat-footed accusation comes first: "Anyone reading the criticism of the play "Simon Called Peter" in the Music and Drama column of this morning's Daily might well think that The Daily is a supplement of Mr. Henry Ford's notorious "Dearborn Independent," or has at least been sub- sidized by it. . . . ." Conflicting opinions arose over the review of "The Dover Road." Exerpts from two of the com- munications will serve to demonstrate two common causes of criticism concerning Daily reciews and reviewers. ". . . . By what process of reasoning the authors of these criticisms can justify such undiplomatic frankness I am at loss to conjecture. "Can it be that these writers are so captivated lives in terror of these labels. The scientific mind, it has been suggested regards the unborn as belong- ing to its constituency even if the unborn exert little influence at the polls. Obviously all this means far from smooth sailing for the professor when he leaves his class-room and journeys to the state capital to serve the state government. One thing is clear, I think, as we face these facts. There is little danger that our state universities will run away with our state governments. The age-old conflict between majority opinion and min- ority opinion, between the scientific mind and the political mind, will see to that. It is clear also, I think, that we cannot afford to let our state govern- ments run away with our state universities. A too intimately political domination of our state univer- sities will, in time, produce in America a "reptile university" to serve current political ends as Bis- mark's "reptile press" served the political ends of the German Empire. Is there, then, any workable cooperation between state and university possible? Here and there and now and then very effective cooperation has been and will be possible. A really great governor or a really great university president can, in any given state, go far towards driving the knowledge of the university and the power of the state abreast. The research technic of the university can, through such agencies as legislative reference departments and through the part-time service of professors on various state commissions, be used to supplement the good will of honest legislators and to obstruct the anti-social will of dishonest legislators. But such service is sickeningly sporadic. We see it in full swing in one state, while fifty miles away across the state line a neighbor-state allows the in- tellectual resources of its university to go to waste politically while the politics of its state capitol degenerate into a mere log-rolling between private interests. Aside from the occasional emergence of a great governor or a great university president, how much can we hope for in the way of cooperation between state universities and state governments? Frankly, I doubt that we shall see the full and intimate cooperation that a rational view of politics suggests as long as we insist upon centralizing so many of our interests in politics. As long as we put our major trust in politics, the state will be supreme, and in any attempted cooperation. between university and state, the state will sooner or later dominate the situation and bend the university to its will. And this defeats the very purpose of the cooperation, which is to biring into politics the impartiality of the scientific mind that is more interested in the results of a test tube than in the results of a ballot-box. The real hope of putting the knowledge of the university at the service of the .life of the state is, I thik, dependent upon an extensive decentraliza- tion of public affairs. I do not mean by this the sort of decentralization that the defenders of states' rights are talking about so much now. Last month I tried to suggest the hollow unreality of the argu- ment that social progress can be served by taking things away from the National Government and giv- ing them back to the state government. As I said then, the real decentralization that we need is 'not from a big political unit to small political units, but a decentralization from politics back to the functional groups that are doing the work of the world and determining the tone and temper of life by the way they do it. If ballot-box democracy is, at heart, a sort of conspiracy against the leadership of its superior men, then the hope of democracies lies in the development through the right kind of educa- tion of unofficial statesmen who shall manage the businesses, the industries, and the professions of the nation with such socially minded vision and technic that we can afford to restrict political government more and more to the policing of life goes outside the halls of legislatures and' cabinet rooms. Here, I think, is the-real political function of our uni- versities; the training of a race of unofficial- states- men we can trust to manage the life of society when society has passed out of the age 'of politics. But this will involve a more intimate relating of state universities to the life of the states. The statesman- ship of our university presidents, in the future, must be expressed not so much in wire-pulling at state capitols as in the development of a more realistic and statesmanlike education that shall enhance and enrich the common life of the state as well as edu- cate the individual students. The second of the two communications on the "Dover Road" review is somewhat in the form of an answer to the first. . . . . The writer of Thursday's review, we find, was quite fair in his criticism of the play and its embellishments. The certain individual he de- nounces was, in plain English, perfectly rotten..