THE MICIIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1951 Taught on 'U, Campus * * * NAME SPELLS FAME: New 'U' President Famous For Literary Achievements S * * * * * It's quite conceivable that any- one with a decidedly literary name like Harlan Henthorne Hatcher would also be awriter, the allitera- tion being so appropriate to a by- line. In fact, the University's most celebrated freshman is just that. He's also had his share of by-lines, and is considered one of the na- tion's foremost experts on the Great Lakes region. IN THE PAST DECADE, Presi- dent Hatcher has contributed a number of works-fiction and aca- demic-which have been received with much esteem by the tradi- tionally hypercritical American reading public. Among these are: Tunnel Hill, Draft Boards, Aided by New U' Service Because of the new and special service of the registrar's office, draft boards have received prompt notice of the students in the selec- tive service age bracket who have registered at the University this fall. A special card included on the registration blank eliminated the extra clerical work anticipated by Registrar Ira M. Smith. These helped special requests from draft boards for the names of draft- eligible students deferred to at- tend college. Each day as students registered, the special card was detached and mailed to the draft boards. At the beginning of this week the regis- trar's office reported that 8,455 cards had gone into the mails. Patterns of Wolf pen, Central Standard Time, Creating the Modern American Novel, and The Buckeye Country. According to many of the liter- ary crowd, however, President Hatcher reaches his heights in a recently published series of books designed to unfold a historical panorama of the Great Northwest. IN The Great Lakes, Lake Erie, The Western Reserve and A Cen- tury of Iron and Men, the author recreates an era which, as he him- self commented, contributed im- mensely to American supremacy. This series, of course, is fo- cused upon the iron ore mining of the fabulous Mesabi and Mar- quette Ranges, the lumber and shipping industries, the great steel mills of Ohio and Pennsyl- vania and the automotive In- dustry of lower Michigan-in- dustries which are the backbone of the American economic sys- tem. Regarding his books, President Hatcher's critics have been lavish in their praise: The Cleveland News commented: In The Western Reserve, Dr. Hatcher demonstrates once more that history may be made a creative art and may be read not only for information but for pleasure and,.inspiration." . * ;* * AND The Detroit Free Press ob- served: "Hatcher's story of Lake Erie is superlative. And how about the author's future literary vistas? Well, ap- parently the president isn't plan- ning on any publications-t least not in the near future. Recently, he admitted that he still has several new works of fic- tion in mind but promised that he would "devote his time exclusively to the University." f} N '}r '\ f1 Ii MEDICAL GENTLEMEN-The uncomfortable looking men in this 1872 photograph probably had to stand or lie tin these various postures for two or three minutes to have their picture taken. They are students of the recently established College of Homeopathic Medicine of this University (in the background), taking a 10 a.m. break. S * * e president of the University, Eras- tus 0. Haven. It seemed that he was the focal point for all the controversy. When the tax money was shunted away from the Uni- versity, it was Haven who bore the brunt of criticism. Yet, he could not actively take one side or the other, aid was actually a pivot for the argument. Dr. Abram Sager, one of the founders of the Medical School and its first dean, offered his resignation, discouraged with the conflicting pressures being brought upon the administra- tion. In 1869, the Legislature again considered the mill tax of two years before. President Haven journeyed to Lansing to plead for a more dis- passionate consideration of the condition that the University was thrown into by the homeopathy issue. The Legislature, perhaps influenced by President Haven's address, voted to grant the Uni- versity the much-needed money without the homeopathy rider. It looked as though things might finally be smoothed over. That summer, the campus looked like it was closing up, perhaps for good. Construction which was fairly well under-way was left incompleted for lack of funds to continue. Students left to go elsewhere to schools which might still be operating when they came back in theI fall. The Regents cast about desper- ately for a new president. Nobody was at all eager to take the job, as might be expected. Finlly, af- ter an unsuccessful attempt to secure James Burrill Angell, presi- dent of the University of Ver- mont, for the position, the Re- gents saddled the white haired old University Latin scholar, Prof. Henry S. Frieze, with the job by appointing him president pro tem. It was the methodical and conciliatoryhadministration of President Frieze that cleared the way for the settlement of jthe homeopathy question. H~e managed to keep the fighting to a minimum, but could not effect a - final reconciliation. The talk caused by President Haven's precipitous resignation hal died down considerably by 1871, when James Angell final- ly accepted the post of presi- dent. * * *' PRESIDENT ANGELL perceiv- ed that the chief complaint of the Medical School faculty was not the , hiring of homeopathic pro- fessors in the University, but spe- cifically in the Medical School. It was proposed that a separate School of Homeopathic Medicine be set up. This proved to be the solu- tion. The Legislature appropri- ated money for the University to hire two homeopathic profes- sors, and the College of Homeo- pathic Medicine came into be- ing. It was never a very popular school after that. Within 25 years, its dean, Dr. H. L. Obetz, propos- ed that it be combined with the Medical School, but the long fight of a few years before was still too fresh in the minds of the admin- istration. It struggled on, with the enrollment reflecting the rise and fall of homeopathy in the public favor, until 1921. By then, only a few depart- ments were left in the school, and these were closely duplicated in the Medical School. So the two s c h o o l1s quietly merged, and homeopathy on the campus was, to all intents and purposes, a dead issue. r I e I a', 1951-52 LECTURE COURSE presents TWO GREAT DRAMATIC ARTISTS in Two Exciting Dramatic Programs 4 t" '_ :: J1...YL..1N VIjI [I !VV1a)1 [L- V I