THE SAL EMITE March 9, 195] OfUH4J04^ After close examination of the series of edi torials in the last three issues of the Salemite, there are a number of conclusions to be drawn and compromises to accept. Ihe following opinions are not thos(' of a few girls on^ cam pus, but a more representative number. These opinions were voiced through open discussions on this subject of what Salem is, should be, or shouldn't be. College life is a tremendous leap from the previous life to which we, as freshmen,^ have been aci'ustomed. Before we came to Salem, thought a great deal about the future and what we wanted to do with our college edu cation when we had completed our four years. Kaidi girl has a certain ambition which she wish(‘s to work toward and eventually achieve. She chose Salem as a place to help her reach her desired goal. For, after all, one couldn’t (‘xpect evei-ything to come after four short ymirs in any educational institution. A per son has to be able to apply what he learns to his own individual character. No school, no matter how large, can possibly offer a perfect coui'se in every field. Happiness and contentment are achieved through adjust ment ; therefore, those who make the adjust ment will be haptiy and content, and those who cannot make the adjustment will be un- ha|)))V and discontented. From our presimce in these various open discussions on this subject, we have gathered that every individual has her own convictions. Therefore, quite obviously, each individual will stand by her own opinions. To continue arguments siudi as those which have been going on would be pointless, since it would virtually end in a dead-lock. Bo we want a fight, or do we want a better school? Each jicrson should have open-mindedness enough to listen to all sides of the discussion; intelli- g('nce enough to sort the good ideas from the bad; and perseverance enough to put the good ideas into practice. For, after all, any school is what the students make it. We don’t want to tear down the “i\*led'-walls.” We want to make them a firm foundation for our later Helen Ridgeway Phvllis Forrest 3bea4> . . . This editorial is intended as an introduction to OIK' which is more specific fo be written next week. The basis for all regard must be trust and admiration and res])ect—each of which is a counterpart of the other. Regard in itself is flexibh', as it can appear in more than one form. This form can be love, it can be friend ship, but it must always result in devotion; not devotion through a blind and lazy faith which really loves only security, but rather a reasonable faith—one which looks at all the aspects of the object of esteem and wholly realizes its intrinsic worth. The object may be a religion; it may be a person; it may be a group of persons; or it may be an institu tion, which is a group of persons plus a work ing dogma—the heart, soul, mind and person ality which guides the corresponding qualities of the persons who reside within the walls of the institution. This dogma may be a work ing oire; it may be fundamental, universal and immutable in its utter honesty, bnt it must not be static and hence stagnant. There are a few basic principles of life which God Himself gave to us through Moses. These are unchangeable. If they are followed in their very facet and with true devotion, the problems which perpetually present them selves will unfailingly be solved, for these basic elements are limitless, timeless and in fallible in their applicability. Petty grievan ces and concerns will vanish, life will lose its tarnish, enuni and dispair will become impossible. Put what of these petty grievances which spring inevitably from petty causes? They seem to be (juite prevalent in the world, they ovc'rrun us, blotting ont the matters of real significance; small, insidious practices and at titudes—cozening and impune. We might localize them to our microcosmography of Salem and scrutinize without bias. Reform the world ? It’s best to start at home. Where are these attitudes and practices? They are everywhere: they are in our hand book, they are in our faculty, they are in our student body, they are in our dining hall. (Continued on page three) Fitzgerald Considered By Pax Davis It does his memory little service, I suspect, that this winter America has gone a little l)ug-eyed on the life, misfortunes ami — but only slightly—the work of F. Scott Fitz gerald, the author of “The Great Gatshy,” “Tender Is The Night” and a handful of the best short stories of this century. Fitzgerald, as we can see at last, was a major American artist. But the best seller lists suggest that our interest centers on the corruption and tra gedy of his life rather than on the singing triumph of his best work. And though even by this we pay him a sort of homage, our belated obsession with his downfall sug gests that we really see little more still than the surface aspects of his corrosive genius. Arthur Mizen- er’s fine biography, “The Far Side of Paradise,” should set the record straight, but it has produced, in stead, a mad scramble after gossip column morsels and warmed-over dirt. By the same token, Budd Schulberg’s grand novel, “The Dis enchanted,” has been gobbled up as the tabloid version of Fitzger ald’s sad and bitter life, rather than what it really is: a major ef fort by a novelist to dramatize the workings of another novelist’s mind and the pressures which pervert that working in America. .And it need not be so. For the story Mizener tells, and the per ceptions he brings to the Fitzger ald work, ought to help us gain a cletirer picture of the novelist’s con tribution to American letters. It is, of course, a pathetic story. Fitzgerald, blessed with the beauty of a collar-add and the grace, talent charm and wit of a young Prome theus, seemed destined for the sort of triumph only Hollywood could imagine; and yet he plummeted, almost from the first day of his success, to failure, both in art and life, with so headlong a fury that those who watched it are still, 2a years later, a little breathless. Dis sipation, a mad wife and an ex- travagent desire to live up to his sudden fame perhaps played major parts in his tragedy, but, as Miz ener makes clear, it was the “spoiled priest” in Fitzgerald which lav back of his ultimate destruc- tiOT. Unable to resist the impulse toward what he thought glamorous living', yet at the same time un willing to accord that acquiescence the sanction of approval, he lived in a constant tension between in dulgence and self-reproach. This was misery, and as Mizener’s bio graphy shows, misery of the most painful sort. And yet, it was not quite a com plete failure. Though this con stant inner struggle proved Fitz gerald’s destruction, it strangely led to the production of a bril liant, if limited, body of work. “The Great G a t s b y,” his first really first-rate novel, has a purity of form and grace of execution that could only have resulted from a crystalline conception. Brief, swift and epigrammatically com pelling, it objectifies just those im pulses in Fitzgerald which never granted him relief. “Tender Is The Night,” though (Continued on page six) A Professor’s Notes Notes From An Instruetor’s Memo Pad March 2, Memo from Salemite: “Faculty are complacent, irrespon sible.” Cost of living (1950-51) up 20% Wages for laborers, equivalent increase Our take-home pay, down 5% Countermeasures; Since savings now depleted and home fully mortgaged, no recourse here. But husbands work in summer, wives during academic year. Mrs. intends to peddle perfume on the streets next year. Remind wife to stop at Bakery for sale of broken cookies and stale bread. Investigate savings on mouldy bread. .March 3. Memo: “Salem has small classes, allowing close relation ship between faculty and stu dents.” Normal elsewhere: 3 classes, 2 committees Normal here: 4 classes, 4 com mittees Maximum here: 7 classes, 9 com mittees -Also expected to handle depart mental correspondence, cut sten cils, etc, March 4. Memo: “The value of a college is measured by the ex cellence and prestige of its faculty.” Grants available for research or attendance at professional meet ings : none. Opportunity for study: none, ex cept during summer. But see note March 2. Inducement for research: Elsewhere: 12 months sabbatical leave, with pay, every 7th year. Here: leave without pay, a gen erous offer which none can af ford to accept. Inducement for continued resi dence : Elsewh’ere: free tuition for wife and children. Here: full tuition charged, even for wife auditing husband’s course. March 5. Projects now underway for a “greater Salem.” Plant: new heating installation, redecoration throughout, sumpt- our friendship suite, science build ing with terrazzo floors, rumpus rooms with elaborate flourescent lights. Faculty: ??? Perhaps we should adopt the mottoes “Labor is its own reward” and “Money is the root of all evil. Must convince wife of this. March 6. Wife enthusiastic. Assume com placent, carefree attitude and re commend mottoes to students On way home check stores for sales of leftovers, March 7. Attend faculty meeting, assume professorial air, and listen to dis course on “Our Philosophy of Education at Salem,” Offer a few profound remarks. I Am Afraid Editor’s Note: This week’s editor is Lee Rosenbloom. Next week’s issue will be the last one edited by this year’s staff. By Catherine Bircicel I am afraid— I am afraid in reading news papers, in listening to speeches. I am afraid of those men dressed in white, who claim aloud, “Look at those dressed in black; they are wrong—And those dressed in blue, in red—They are wrong also”. Black, blue, red are w r o n g— White is the only right color— I am afraid ,of those who con demn. Each man strives for his ideal in his own way. Truth is a mys- erious book. Who can pretend that he only reads right ? The other civilizations—we con demn them in the name of insuf ficiency of their religions— But look—In our country, during the last twenty centuries, you could easily find equal blemishes. Fanatic Christians condemn other religions. They forget—the con quest of Africa by France through By A Faculty Member I am not going to use any commas. I will use periods but I will not use commafe. Not that I do not respect them—I do. Actually I’m awed by them. I am awed by many things—transitional phrases unity coherence emphasis metaphors which aren’t mixed phrases which aren’t trite participles which don’t dangle. One thinks one wants to write then one teaches freshman composition. And one learns how involved is a sentence how in volved is a thought. One becomes too nega tive don’t use a comma here don’t say ‘won derful.’ And. then one tries to be positive (with other people’s waiting). One quotes Sidney: ‘Look into your heart and write.’ Then "one Sunday one looks into one’s own heart and finds that THE CRITIC sits on the used-to-be-geimine-leather-but-is-now-recovered -in-plastic throne where one’s ’shaping spirit of imagination’ was—should have been—ought to be. And that is why I will not use commas. I think first of "freshmen. Large round eyes and open mouths. ‘And where are you going my pretty maid?’ Some say ‘Nowhere’ and they mean it. Some say ‘Nowhere’ and don’t mean it. Some say ‘I wish I knew’—others ‘You tell me’-or ‘Where is there to go?’ And they all tell you about the English teacher they had their senior year in high school. ‘Wonderful’ ‘Inspiring’ ‘the BEST!’ Then they look at me. I smile because 1 now know all good English teachers" are not in colleges or universities—they all teach English ’ to seniors in high schools everywhere. : Then I remind them that they are not like L anyone else. That they are themselves, 'riiat they should write about themselves. And so they write about themselves and it sounds like everybody else. So I ask them to read. They do. ‘What do you think?’ I ask. They reply ‘My Sunday School teacher never said this.’ And they re gard you strangely with their large eyes. I speak to the sophomores. They avidly record every word I say. They do not have wide eyes. They have half-lidded eyes-1 guarded expressions. I do not ask them where |, . they are going. They so obviously know, p : And they know’ me too. They write exami-; nation papers designed to please me. Thej| ' are wuse in the wmys of getting ahead they I half-humorously tolerate my enthusiasm for|' Shelleys and William Blake and Jonathan ( Swift. I have not made up my mind about juniors| ' so I wull pass over them. p, And go to the sated seniors. ‘They havip been talked at for four years and they ar(| tired— Some of them knit long sox witli ■ mature fingers. A flash from their left hands ■ with every stitch. They regard me if they; regard me at all with benign eyes which ‘You don’t have a ring on your finger and if' you have bells on your toes you are immoral Others psychoanalyze you as you t e a c h-j. Others are absent—in one way or another. [ But I have dealt wuth the general. Theif^ is also the particular. There is the questio): '. y that comes in class just w'hen I have come h think I am god. There is the examinatioi ^ . paper that bolts me from the chair—that ^ makes me regard the coffee table as if '; were alive. L ‘ Then my halo disintegrates and I becoitf|j : gratefully humble. slavery, the slaughters in the South of France in the 16th century are not less than Eastern polygany, or other extravagant rites. And today, how many times do ue read such statements as: The immorality of commun ism The evil of communism” The wrong of communism” ? Turn the page, and here is an other article about a Korean battle won by the western powers: ‘‘The purpose of this fight was not only conquest of territory but killing of Reds—” Are we then entitled to condemn in the name of morality? We say that in our civilization we have such defects in spite of the perfection of Christianism—but in the other civilization it is be cause of the imperfections of their way of thinking. (Continued on page three) tCfje Salemite EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT , Editor-in-Chief Clara Belle LeGra«' Associate Editor _ _ Lee Rosenbloi#^ Associate Editor Mary Lib Weavfj Assistant Editor Lola Daws’‘| Copy Editor _ Jane Watsfi Make-up Editor Margaret Thoin*^ Assistant Copy Editor Marion Wats«* Music Editor _ Jean PatW’ Sports Editors: Adrienne McCutcheon, MariP* Samuel. Business Manager Betty Griff* Advertising Manager '’’’’Xarolyn Asst. Advertising Manager Jane Schoolfi? Circulation Manaeer Glara Tusti'V Exchange Editor Fae heA