>-1 r«' holding 3 2' the past. ee players I into guards th teams members ah (the 'he ruesday, Febh^ isty ns on beinfl led le, Ga., Ich he averag . A'e'^ otball Boar on the basi (tie I outstanding the middle a basketball tja5' ving the interviews th® on on the Sts'® ;lal d creative inias that uill 486-T; inch. Tc I 15 lime* dui iven the situation of dissatisfaction on the part '^ents with the college curriculum, they pay good lit an education they have no say about. At that ®X,'^tion they are taught what will be their "trade" rest of their life. In the eyes of some admini- ' ^s, students are not canable.of determining the ication of valuable/nonvaluable learning. So continue to learn what the faculty and admini- consider worthwhile. Students are nrogrammed ,^ond to the system. And this conditioning began ^ fnost of us even left grammar school. I am aware this college camous we have what we consider a ar^nroach to education, i.e. classrooms without that’s neat, but we will never be able to this concent of learning because I raised in a restricted educational atmosnhere. of "teacher-student, roll-call, perfect at- weekly tests, I will now seat you in anhabeti- the numose of organization" is ingrained skulls. For some, any deviation from the ' onal norm is frightening. We were lucky, we nave to protest to get a change in our curriculum t have to do a thing. The h-l-h was adopted at steps of the Administration Building concerning the Kent State killings. But these were minor incidents that more or less went unnoticed. 4. fu"*® classify this break with tradition that the newspaper has made as revolution. And it is in a sense. We weren't happy and so we pursued something ^ ww wvy a. i uc u—JL—14 Wcis aaopuea at workshop (pre-school 1970) and on September to join me o” '•"h® curriculum was introduced to the i/ing the top _®ody through the student newspaper. It was case of. . .okay, for the next two years we to experiment with the educational process, 1^^® it because it is a good thing, was to offer us a more flexible and in- recogni‘i‘”’^,5 ®yft®"» instead of the traditional "authoritarian oative to'®. i4 ^®ialized curriculum" we were used to. But who 'ionized the curriculum? The same people usually khat goes on in a classroom, the teachers. And sense we aren’t so revolutionary after all. Mars Hill College ever had a sit-in, rally, or ^ you want to call a revolutionary act of this 'om®* students literally demanded sthing be done about the cafeteria service, year before that there was a sit-in on the we thought was better.^ Our dream is to make this paper a iielc of action and^if we had to commit "revolution" to acheive this goal, we would and still will. Because we believe in the dream. We must also remember that revolution doesn’t nec essarily denote violence. Everyone goes through momentous changesin their lives and that in itself is revolution. Our society has defined revolution as takeover, threat;’ we have an all-around bad interpretation of the word. ^ + - ^ difference in saying that the ondition of black people has been revolutionized through integration as opposed to the condition of someone’s life being revolutionized through Jesus Christ? Both deal with the betterment of humanity, though one does encompass something a little larger. soaked in violence. Our society + eventually enslaving the black man. But is there any good in violence? According to Arthur Schlesinger there is. "Violence secured Ain^can lndeDendence, freed elavae, and stopnad Hitler. But Schlesinger does not advocate violence but rather scorns it. "Among the great powers in this decade, only America—like Russia, Germany Italv and ha^ "'O'*® "“--ier- a m^or InJtS- ment of politics. . .what kind of people are we we Pea^fS^revolutr^^ frightening people on this’nlanet." eaceful revolution, can it be done? Perhaps if we hammer our swords into plowshares.