TUESDAY, lskj vu LAILY TAR HEEL, r r; Younger Gene Why haven't we heard from today's youth? IN TIME, this week, appears "The Younger Generation". . . a major report on the na tion's silent, cryptic youth. The following are excerpts: Youth today is waiting for the hand of fate to fall on ithoulders, meanwhile working fairly hard and saying almost nothing. Hie most startling fact about the younger generation is its silence ... It does not issue manifestos, make speeches or carry posters. It has been called the "Silent Generation?' But what does the silence mean? .What, if anything, does it hide? Or are youth's elders merely hard of hearing? But youth is taking its upsetting uncertainties with extraordinary calm. When the U. S. be gan to realize how deeply it had committed itself in Korea, youngsters of draft age" had a bad case of jitters; but all reports agree that they nave since settled down to studying or working for as long as they can. The majority seem to think that war with Russia is inevi table sooner or later, but they feel that they will survive it. r Hardly anyone wants to go into the Army; there is little enthusiasm for the military life, no enthusiasm for war. Youngsters do not talk like heroes; they admit freely that tfeey will try to stay out of the draft as long as they can. But there is none of the systematized and senti mentalized antiwar feeling of the 10s. Pacifism has-been almost nonexistent since World War II; so are Oxford Oaths. But youth's ambitions have shrunk. Few youngsters today want to mine diamonds in South Africa, ranch in Paraguay, climb Mount Everest, find a cure for cancer, sail around the world, or build an industrial empire. Some would like to own a small independent busi ness, but most want a good job with a big firm, and with it, a kind of suburban idyll. The younger generation can still raise helL The significant thing is not that it does, but how it goes about doing it. Most of today's youngsters never seem to lose their heads; .-even when they let themselves go, an alarm clock seems to be ticking away at the back of their minds; it goes off sooner or later, and sends them back to school, to work, or to war. The younger generation seems to drink less. "There is nothing clarion or inglorious any more about getting etewed," J&ys one college professor. Whether youth is more or less promiscuous than it used to be is a mat ter of disagreement. Fact is that it is less showy about sex As a whole, it is more sober and conservative, but in individual cases, e.g., the recent dope scan dals , it makes Flaming Youth look like amateurs. Educators across the U. S. complain that young people" seem to have no militant be liefs. They do not speak out for anything. Professors who used to enjoy baiting students by outrageously praising child labor or damn ing Shelley now find that they cannot get a rise out of the docile note-takers in their classes. But God (whoever or whatever they understand by that word) has once more become a factor in; the younger generation's thoughts. The old argument of religion v. science is subsiding; a system wsch does not make room for both makes little sense to today's younger genera tion. It is no longer shockingly unfashionable to discuss God. --- Young people do not feel cheated. And they do not blame anyone. Before this gen eration, "they were always to blame. It was a standard prewar feeling that "they" had let them down. But this generation puts the blame on life as a whole, not on parents, politicians, cartels, etc Says a TIME correspondent in Boston: You cannot say of them, Youth WiU Be Served, became the phrase suggests a voracious strik ing out from security, wealth and stabiUty, The best you can say for this younger generation 2, 'Youth Will Serve: " With reports on subjects l2c this- and on subjects growing even more directly out of the headlines TIME each week attracts 1,600,000 of America's alert, most intelligent, most influential families , . . the families who do the most planning, recommending and buying in the horns anckout. Every week, these people are America's largest audience of best customers. Every week they take TIME to: get it Straight. - . . " f ' ;TIMF t-C The WcoMy Novsmagasino Copyright 1951, TIME, Inc. PAGE THREE 3 U y a S, I Id r er ic i i ; t , J. . i ; : : i . , ! i M i .i- I : , . : ,