104 INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EDUCATION.
the hope of our future. Those who profit by their advantages, as a rule,
will be found taking the right attitude toward all public questions. The
more liberal their education and the more wise their teachers, the surer
are they to be found on the side of liberty and good government, the more
steady will be their resistance to that conservatism which is afraid of prog-
ress, and to that radicalism which heeds not the voice of history. The
Jay will come, if it has not already dawned, when professors of law will
be taken from our universities for arbitration and counsel in questions
iffecting the peace of nations ; when men of letters, or at least of academic
culture, will be sent, as the best representatives of the American people, to
the most cultivated courts of Europe ; when the students of finance will be
asked to leave their chairs of instruction and assist the officers of govern-
ment in disentangling fiscal problems ; when the missionary, trained by his
linguistic discipline for the mastery of oriental tongues, shall become the
nterpreter and introducer of western ideas into eastern countries; when
men of science will be more and more relied on in the solution of the
world problems pertaining to life and force ; when philologians will inter-
oret the texts upon which theologians will base their creeds; when the
daily press will more and more readily open its columns to the matured
opinions given out by learned men ; and when the barriers (slight and
transitory barriers, we may well believe) which have grown up between
‘he common schools and the universities will disappear from every part
of the country; and when knowledge, accurate, scientific, comprehensive
knowledge, will be regarded not only for its own sake but as the parent
of wisdom and virtue. Am I speaking of the future or of the present ?
Has not the day of universities dawned ? Have not our higher institutions
won that position that entitles them to the confidence, the admiration, and
the support of all the American people ? These five contributions they
will make to our civilization :—Science will take the place of empiricism ;
the power of sustained effort will be augmented ; good government will
be established ; encouragement will be provided for men of rare intellec-
tual qualities ; and the noble enjoyment of leisure will be assured.
HOW FAR IS IT DESIRABLE THAT UNIVERSITIES
SHOULD BE OF ONE TYPE?
BY PRESIDENT MARTIN KELLOGG, OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA.
Ir is a time of rapid expansion in our leading institutions of learning.
No one of them is content with its offered facilities and its present
endowments. Every one of them is working on some theory of further
development. There are two theories of university development :
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