-9- it to him, and on opening it discovered careful notes of the private conversations of several of their colleagues, obviously destined for the authorities. The result was that the spy was cut by his colleagues and sometime later when he inquired of one of them why he was being cut, he was told the reason. Thereupon, he said "You don't suppose that I am the only person doing this, do you?" The administration of the universities causes unhappiness not only for reasons of this kind that are largely emotional, but also on strictly technical ground. One of my informants whom I consider particularly trustworthy said to me, "Perhaps the greatest difficulty in Germany today is that men who have the education and capacity of chiefs are ruled and ordered about by men of the mentality and education of Unteroffizieren." He added that there are two exceptions, the army itself, which is beyond the control of ignorant, incompetent meddlers, and a small group around Schacht. (To this I am inclined to add, from what others have told me, a small group around von Neurath. Incidentally it is amusing, if tragic, to think of the feelings of a person like von Neurath, a Wurtemberg gentleman brought up in a hardworking, cosmopolitan, aristocratic family, and, I suppose, a competent, diplomatic technician, as he now is, firmly embedded in the Nazi regime.) At all events the universities are run by stupid, ignorant, prejudiced, largely dishonest people. Of that I think there can be little doubt, and the unintelligent mistakes are quite as serious as the deliberate acts in their effect upon competent scholars and scientists as well as upon the instruction. I found a few indications of sharply limited hopes for the future of the universities. First, one medical scientist said to me, "They like to say they don't need us, but they know that they do." To this I replied |