PACE TWO "I THE MICHIGAN DAILY THUTRSDAY, JUY 15, 1948 - ...... .... The Large University WHAT IS THE FUNCTION of a large uni- versity? This is a question that has plagued many an educator and philosopher in its time. However, I doubt that it has even occurred to a large group of people upon, whom the answer, if any, would have a big effect, These people are the high school grad- uates and their parents. Many of them think that a large university is, simply because of its size, a better place to get an education than a smaller school. This is not necessarily true, especially at present. Because of the lack of foresight of top- level administrators the last war left a gap in this country's scientific training program. There was a period of several years when very few scientists were being trained. This loss is accentuated by the tremendous in- crease in the number of students brought about by the educational provisions of the veterans laws. Universities have been placed under a heavy strain, and have solved their problems through the increased use of the teaching fellow system. The teaching fellow arrangement is quite satisfactory to both the university, which needs teachers, and the fellows, who need the financial aid to continue their studies. The fellows are equipped to teach only ele- mentary courses, and the experienced pro- fessors are needed for higher level instruc- Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. NIGHT EDITOR: LIDA DAILES tion. Whether or not this arrangement pro- vides the best possible instruction for the freshmen and sophomores is another matter -the circumstances which forced the move did not consider that matter, and until we get a greater number of trained p'ersonnel, or fewer students, or both, things will have to stand. A somewhat different trend, however, has been showing in smaller schools. They have, perhaps unthinkingly, been accepting uni- versity standards for personnel. "Send us a couple of Ph.D.'s" helps to boost the rating df a small school. Thus we see that sending a high school graduate to a large university may be a mistake. He may, for one thing, be taught by less well-educated men than in a small school. Then too, large universities are in- variably "glazed-door" schools. The glazed door is just one of the ways the university aids its teachers in staying out of the reach of their students in order to get some work done. This is imperative if the teacher is to accomplish any of the work of creating and evaluating new knowledge. This work is just as much a part of its function as teaching, for what use is a large library if nobody has time to use it? It seems fortunate that the recent report of the President's Commission on Higher Education hasrecommended the establish- ment of many smaller schools to handle the first two years of college. Students need per- sonalized instruction more than extensive facilities during these first two years, and the shift later to the mass-production edu- cation of the large university will be less severe. -James E. Duras. MATTER OF FACT: Not Together By SAMUEL GRAFTON 11ILADELPHIA- There was once a time when the Democrats could agree, and now they cannot. That is the situation here, and you can treat it as comedy if you like. But underneath there is something else, somnething quite real, something serious. For you would not have to paraphrase very much to make it read: There was once a time when the country could agree, and now, perhaps, it cannot. When you begin to see Democratic disunity as a shadow of a new national disharmony, you stop laughing at this convention. For this convention must reflect America, even if it reflects it distortedly, like a shiny wheel hub. And if this Democratic mixture cannot agree, the country cannot agree, for this mixture is the country, make no mis- take about that. Here you have them, the big city bosses, the political masters of the South, the labor people, the riders of the purple sage, the kind of people they write novels about when they want to write novels about America. Nobody would dream of writing a novel about a Republican any more. To some of the observers, laughing and giggling at what they see, one wants to say: This is yourselves you are looking at. This is what it means to live in an age in which some men oppose civil rights, and others are indifferent to a struggle for independence in the Middle East, and others still seek to curb labor by law. It may be a vaudeville that is going on here, but the subject of the joke is the story of our lives. This wretched little convention is more important for what it shows than for what it is. Maybe it shows that the era of locally, sectionally and geographically based parties is over. Maybe it shows that we are going to have to go on to a new kind of party, which starts with a set of principles and on that basis seeks to assemble men, in- stead of starting with a set of men and then seeking to assemble principles. If so it may mean the opening of a new political eta in America, in which while the Left may find itself without allies, the Right may find itself without followers. This is the great issue that is being decided here, and, of course, it is not being mentioned. For even to debate the question of whether it would not be better to go back to the old way of conciliation and compromise would be to assure a community of interest which is beyond the power of the factions here to assert any longer. They are not discuss- ing the natures of oil and water; they are oil and water. If anybody insists that this convention is a joke, I shall dutifully laugh, but I am afraid the comedy, if it be one will continue after the convention ends this week, and that it is. going to have a long run, in many houses, before many audiences. (Copyright, 1948, New York Post Corp.) - AMA THOSE DARN 5ATLLITES! ~s' DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN MATTER OF FACT: The Democratic Bankruptcy By JOSEPH and STEWART ALSOP PHILADELPHIA - President Truman is coming to Philadelphia to accept the nomination of a party which is bankrupt, not only politically, but also in the simple financial sense of the word. The best test. of the dreadful state of the Democratic party is the dreadful state of its treasury, This is perhaps squalid practical fact, which will never the less intimately affect the course of the coming campaign. Officials of the Democratic national com- mittee talk airily about "several hundred thousand dollars" being in the till. But if this money is there at all, most of it is obligated. Insiders who know their business say that the national committee actually has about $80,000 in hand, which is peanuts measured against the huge bills of the future. Partly, this is the result of sheer folly. Over $20,000 was wasted, for example, on the silly little "Truman victory kits" con- taining thimbles, whistles and the like, which were distributed with the apparent intention of mollifying peevish female dele- gates. Mainly, however, the trouble is that the fat cats have either been alienated or have ceased to regard the Democratic party as a good speculative investment. The con- trast with the past is sad indeed. In 1944, the big money was raised at a sort of marathon cocktail party in the New York hotel suite of chairman of the National Committee Robert E. Hanne- gan. Every afternoon for sixty days suit- able prospects were suitably entertained, and at the psychological moment retired with chairman Hannegan to -the rare pri- vacy of the bathroom. There, among the plumbing fixtures, the checks were signed, for $1,000, $2,000 or $5,000, as the case might be. Among the contributors of those days, one very large group has become un- approachable now because of the Zionist issue, and other groups have been lost to the cause in other ways. Worse still, the professional touch of chairman Hannegan, who is an extremely able practical politician, is now unhappily lacking. He and his cohorts kept the very fattest of the fat cats in reserve until the difficult days at the close of the campaign, when they were individually touched for really big contributions. The present na- tional committee, in an evident moment of despair, has already done the opposite. Reg- istered letters were recently sent by the current national chairman, Senator J. How- ard McGrath, to all the largest contributors of record, asking them to mail their checks at once. The result has been that men who used to give $1,000 have hastily forwarded $500, while former contributors of $5,000 have sent checks for $1,000. The rather peremptory device of registered letters caused some re- sentment. But on the balance, the large contributors were delighted to be given this chance of getting off cheaply. When they are solicited later, they can say they have already laid their contributions on the line, and send the solicitor away with a flea in his ear. This is the situation in which, according to report, the assistant Secretary of Air, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney, has had the arm put on him to handle the Democratic party's finances during the campaign. Whit- ney is an amiable and public-spirited man but he has no previous experience in the ex- tremely specialized task he is about to und- ertake. Obviously, what recommended him for the job is that he possesses a very large private fortune. The Democratic strategists quite clearly expect to run up a big tab, and then leave Whitney to pick the tab up. On the whole, this seems a trifle hard on Whitney. Getting up the cash in politics is never difficult if you are willing to make the right concessions. For instance, "The At- lanta Constitution" has reported, without contradiction, that the big sum needed to finance the forthcoming rump convention of Southern rebels at Birmingham has been supplied by the oil companies. The sordid connection between this fact and the Southern delegations' feverish sup- port of a platform plank endorsing the tidelands oil grab is to obvious to need further discussion. There are all kinds of groups to which the stupider Democrats may be tempted to promise concessions if they will only get up a little folding money. It can naturally be assumed without question that neither Whitney nor of course President Truman will become involved in anything of this sort. Yet it is also true that both as a result of this money problem and in other ways, one of the really grave dangers of the next four months is that the Democrats may be driven by despair to do idiotic, or dangerous or downright improper things. (Copyright, 1948, New York Herald Tribune, Inc) Edi-torial Rounds Detroit Free IPress The GOP Is Also Sick-W ill It lecover? WITH THE REPUBLICAN bandwagon roiling to doy, itb steam calliope blares the victory theme that the lDemocratic party is dead. Dead for the moment it may be, but if the leaders of the GOP are wise and not blinded by the bright light of inpending sucves>, they will carefully diagnose some of their own ils, They may find, after all, that they too are suffering froim a disease that can be fatal. Carryin as they do in their system the corrupting tissues of Old Guardismn and reaction, the Republican Party is none too robust. Whether the party, pointed toward a new militantisn under the progressive leadership of Dewey and Warren can shake off this dry rot and emerge revitalized to meet the challenge of leadeship in do- mestic and world-affairs, is the real isue confronting the Nation next November. To swing with the pendulum is not enough. The pendulum never moves out of its arc. The new Republicanism must be vigorous and forward mov- ing. Otherwise little will be gained by the forthcoming turnover in Washington. N HIS SPEECH of acceptance beoe the Republican National Con- vention, Gov. Dewey made some definite pronilses to the American people. Calling attention to the challenge which confronted the party, he asked that it be met with "depth of undertanding and large- ness of spirit." "These," he said, "are the articles of faith from which the greatness of America has been fashioned. Our people are eager to know again the upsurgitig power of that faith. They are turning to us to put such a faith at the heart of our national life. That is what we are called to do. That is what we will do." Those words are the articles of principle which a country, its spirit dulled by 16 years of New Deal irrationalism and opportunism, is eager to grasp. But can Dewey and Warren deliver? Dewey told the convention that he was unfettered of any promise or obligation. But in the background lurked the ominous figures of the Joe Grundys and all that they stand for'. Out of the convention came the appointment of Hugh D. Scott, a political henchman of Grundy, as chairman of the Republicar) National Committee. Scott had earlier distinguished himself by de- claring that the Republicans should take power because they are "the best stock." Which concepts will prevail in the Republican Party; those expressed by Dewey, or those of Hugh Scott? IT WAS THE GRUNDY, the Smoot and the Hawley type of mind that brought the Republican party upon evil days 16 years ago. If the party is to succeed and to'fulfill its high promise, as voiced by Dewey and Warren, they must be cleaned out and disavowed. "Our task is to fill our victory with such meaning that man- kind everywhere, yearning for freedom, will take heart and move forward out of this desperate darkness into the light of freedom's promise," declared Dewey. Those words are almost Lincolnesque. They need only the men to breathe the fire of life into them. IT WILL NOT BE DONE by the Scotts, the Grundys, the Martins, and those others who in Congress and elsewhere pulled the strings and made the Republican Party vulnerable to the sort of attacks that Senator Barkley made in his keynote at the Democratic Conven-. tion. Whether the Republicans now will move forward under such lib- eral-minded men as Dewey, Warren, Driscoll, Ives and Stassen, and utilize the fine integrity of mind and character of Taft and Vanden. berg, is the real challenge. That is the question the people must consider when they go to the polls in November. In the answer is the real hope of America.J Publicatinks in The Dlly Off'ial E11i1tin is cnstrctiVe notice to a~l membe'rs of tihe Unvesity. Notices for the builet i should be sent in type- Writt en frturno the OtTle of the Sum- necr teasoi, 11odi 1213 Angel Hal, by 3:00 p" r ,n the day preceding pubiu- ratioun(11:00 ip11, Saturdays) Notices THURSDAY, JULY 15, 1948 VOL. LV11L No. 185 Students, College of Engineering: The final day for DROPPING COURSES WITHOUT RECORD will be Fri., July 16. A course may be dropped only with the permis- sion of the classifier after confer- ence with the instructor. Graduate students are remind- ed that courses dropped after noon of July 17th will be re- corded with the grade of E. Mechanical, Industrial-Me- chanical & Civil Engineering Au- gust 1948 Graduates: Mr. W. K. Brown of Standard Oil Company of Indiana will in- terview students in these groups on Tuesday, July 20, for prospec- tive positions with that Organiza- tion, in Room 218 West Engineer- ing Building. Interview schedule is posted on the bulletin board at kln. 225 W. Engineering Bldg. Mechanical & Industrial-Me- chanical Seniors, Graduates: Students should fill out their per- sonal recordcard immediately and watch the bulletin board for fu- ture interviews. These cards are kept on file in the Mechanical Engineering Office permanently and are very important for future reference as well as for interviews by industrial representatives. The third Fresh Air Camp Clinic will be held on Friday, July 16, 1948. Discussions begin at 8 p.m. in the Main Lodge of the Fresh Air Camp located on Pat- terson Lake. Any University stu- dents interested in problems of individual and group therapy are invited to attend. The discus- sant will be Mr. Herbert J. Booth of the Flint State Child Guidance Clin ic, Flint. Lectlures Dean V. A. Tan, College of En- gineering, the University of the Philippines will give a lecture on "Certain Features of the Rehabili- °tation Program of the Philippine iRepublie," Fri., July 16, 3 p.m., loom 445 West Engineering Bldg. Everyone cordially invited. Linguistic Institute Forum Lee- Lure. "Linguistic and Cultural Changre," by Professor Harry Hoi- ier, Professor of Anthropology, iUniversity of California at Los An- geles. Thursday, July 15, 7:30, Rackham Amphitheatre. Dr. Rensis A. Likert, Director of the Survey Research Center, will discuss "The Study of Human Re- lations in Business and Govern- ment by Sample Interview Sur- veys," at 8 p.m. Thurs., July 15, sponsored by the Michigan Ac- tuarial Club, in the East Lecture Room, Mezzanine Floor, Rackham Building. All persons interested are cordially invited. The fourth lecture in the spe- cial lecture series sponsored by the Department of Engineering Mechanics will be presented by Mr. D. B. Steinman, Consulting Engineer of New York. Mr. Stein- man will speak on "Bridges and Aerodynamics" on Friday, July 16, 8 p.m. in the Rackham Am- phitheatre, and Saturday, July 17, at 11 a.m. in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Academic Notices College of Literature, Sciences, and the Arts, Schools of Educa- tion, Forestry, Music, and Pub- lie Health Students who received marks of I, X, or "no report" at the close of their last semester or summer ses- sion of attendance will receive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by July 21. Students wisliing an ex- tension of time beyond tliis date in order to make up this work should file a petition addressed to the appropriate ofl'icial inl their school with Room 4, U.R1. wiere it will be transmitted. History Final Examination Make-Up: Saturday, July 17, 9 o'clock, Room B, haven Hall. Stu- dents must come with written per- mission of instructor. The Applied Mathematics Semi- nar will meet on Thurs., July 15, 4 p.m. in Room 247 West Engi- neering Building. Professor G. E. Hay will continue his talk on "Approximations in Elasticity." Preliminary Examinations for Doctorate in School of Education. Examinations will be held on Au- gust 16, 17 and 18, from 9 till 12 noon. Anyone desiring to take these examinations should notify Dr. Woody's Office, 4000 Univer- sity High School, by July 19. Concerts Carillon Recital by Percival Price, University Carillonneur, 7:15 tonight. All-French pro- gram, including compositions by Couperin, Gounod, Cantelon, Saint-Saens, Debussy, and closing with La Marseillaise......,.... Events Today Young Democrats: meeting Thurs., 8 p.m., Room 319, Mich. Union. International Center Tea today, 4:30-6 p.m. Hostesses will be Mrs. Charles Philipps and Mrs. Irving H. Anderson. French Club: Bastille Day will be celebrated today at 8 p.m., 2nd floor Terrace Room of the Michi- gan Union. Professor Charles E. Koella, of the Romance Language Department, will speak informally on the occasion. French songs and social games. All those interested are cordially invited. La p'tite causette mees today at 4:30 ini the International Cen- ter. There will be a get-together of former students of Northern Michigan College of Education Thurs. evening, July 15. Meet in (Continued on Page 4- ' Fifty-Eighth Year ' x, 'f 2 -I M~ it Lydia Mendelssohn ... YOU CAN'T TAKE IT WITH YOU "You Can't Take it With You," a theatre natural if there ever was one, whidh de- lighted last night's first night audience in the third of the Speech Department's Sum- mer series, was a competently produced pre. sentation of Kaufman and Hart's Helzapop- pin-like farce. The cast headed by James Lynch as whimsical grandfather Martin Vanderhof was uniformly effective, but there were no standout performances by any of the princi- pals. Some minor however gems were turned in by Richard Etlinger, as Kolon- :ov, Grace Foster, as Essie, William Pitts as Donald, and Ann Davis as a most con- vincing female drunk. Lynch, who is coming dangerously close to being typed, exhibited his usual feeling for comedy. M rtin Vanderhof, a Will Rogers kind of wit, gave him ample oppor- tunity to get the most out of a comic line. But the role of Vanderhaf embodied the themeatic speeches of the play. Lynch, in- telligently delivered these speeches with the same gestures and in the same tone as his comic lines. And while he succeeded in keeping the old man a consistent character his comedy came off sharply, but the the- meatic passages seemed pale and ineffe,- tive. Shigley Loeblich and William Bromfield performed capably as the young lovers. Highpoint of the play was the wild bit before the end of the second act curtain which starts out slowly enough but winds up as a combination of Coney Island on Sunday and a National convention. The beginning of the third act, however, dragged a bit, and even after it did get ro '- ing it never regained the exhuberance ani abandon of the second act. The success of last night's performance was one of brilliant flashes rather than as an entire play. It moved along smoothly un- til some good line or piece of slapstick would step it up. Oren Parker contributed another fine set and the use of makeup by the cast was uni- formnlv excellent. , Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board in Control of Student Publications. Editorial Staff Lida Dailes.........Managing Editor Kenneth Lowe.......Associate Editor Joseph R. Walsh, Jr. ....Sports Editor Business Staff Robert James......Business Manager Harry Berg .......Advertising Manager Ernest Mayerfeld .Circulation Manager Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper. All rights of re-publication of all other matters herein are also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscription during the regular school year by carrier, $5.00, by mail, $6.00. Member Associated Collegiate Press 1947-48 .1 '1 41 + MUSIC + BARNABY v. 1 UESDAY EVENING Carl Weinrich, one of the finest or contemporary organ- ists, gave a truly magnificent recibal at Hill Auditorium. No doubt, Mr. Weinrich's repu- tation had a lot to dok with the fact that an unusually large audience was present. His performance certainly justified his fame, and more important was a source of great pleasure to all. An interesting feature or the evening's program, was its great unity of style. The emphasized polyphonic Baroque, flowed smoothly into the neo-classic works of Hinde- emith and Krenek, dramatically indicating their basic source of inspiration and tech- nique, as well as that of many of their mate the Baroque organ for which most of these works were written. This registration gave the music a highly pleasant authentic tone quality, and also enabled Mr. Wein- rich to project the separate melodic lines with a great degree of clarity. The evening's performance was uniformly excellent. One would run out of superlatives though, if a description were to be attempted of Mr. Weinrich's Bach Prelude and Fugue in A minor. His rigidly hypnotic rhythm in the Fugue, tempts one to wonder whether he may not have swallowed a metronome or clock sometime in his life, as did the crocodile in "Peter Pan." A fine Chorale Prelude and powerful Chaconne in C minor, Mom and Pop left for home- themh as their car went past you mgh oir it around tthem bou oar m'boy. You explained the reasons for giving up forming for this summer theoter idea? I didnt get a chance- My friend Gus, the Ghost. t ravarena JL ta .-rtrrnat All the risks of agriculture- You pointed out the dangers of drought, blights, locusts, damage by otters, hexing of the cow by jealous neighbors- No- k A I'm glad your folks agree with me that the theater is a much sounder venture Yes, the play's the thing- Whaf playa C C 7 Al tr1 q- -W e's at your house. Didn't e'tl I h41 m'biv. I rented I v a L I don't see why not. However, "3