- oj-i.i-LTLn.-.-.-j-j-j_-_-i_-j-_-|_n_rj-L-_r_-.-.- The School And Tlie Town By OVID WILLIAMS PIERCE > Editor'* Note: Quite a few Bden ton people have made a kreat deal of comment about tlf address mad* hy Ovid William* Pierce at the Sheoard-Pruden Memorial Li brary Thursday Jn connection with the observance of National Library Week. A number of requests have been made for its publication, so that the speech appears below. I shall begin what I have to say with the admission that many of the words which follow were written almost a year ago for an occasion entirely unlike the present one. I was asked to return for graduation*.exercises to the stage upon which’l myself »had once stood. Actually, it was later when I reread what I had said that I realized how much of it had been spoken, not to the young people, but to their elders, our„own gen eration, whose values "they had no choice but 'to accept; I am aware that there is an element of arrogance in the act ®f standing before one’s con temporaries and of (JreOTming to say that in these directions do values lie. But herhtfls, now, there may be some measure of justification because of my as sociation with schools^ In any case, the frecent and; astonishing concern for the re-, sponsibility of the schools herei in our country—rather, we should j say, the concern for our failure of responsibility—would seem to , warrant a repetition of some of 1 these words. We are alarmed, now because for the first time that I know of in my life people who ordinarily have no/.immedi- ] ate concern with - 1 * educational processes are beginning to see for themselves the consequences attendant upon any compromise in standards. There is no Question that events beyond the boundaries of our country have brought to this sudden and alarming focus the inherent failures we. now see. But the thing that Sefems most I regrettable is the fact that, as a nation, we had to' 16arn of our selves from the outside. 1 Are all our convictions and standards so ill defined that we must have a rival nation describe' 'them for us? Are we to arrive at our concept of excellence by word from alien land? I do believe that if the cur rent agitation about the schools is attributable solely to fear, and not, in part at least, to -our own independent perception -of values, to our own dedication to knowl edge itself, then the agitation might as well not have been. It will not have cured the deep er ill. What it tried to demonstrate on the earlier occasion was that the young people had been done a disservice. AIL of us—parents, teachers, society had conspired to perpetuate their immaturity by assuring that sdcur.ty and achievement were within their reach and that they were and should be theirs merely by vir ,tue of demand. AH experience shows that nothing has ever been so won. Ultimately noth ing is ours except that which we create —either by labor, or by courage, or by love. But why is it today that every where we are told*, otherwise? Has every century held before its youth the myth that it need not give all that it has? Emer son tried a hundred years ago to destroy the fiction that we do not live in a moral world and that the immutable laws of com pensation by a capricious act of God mav be suspended in our favor. The immutable laws of nature, he saw, had never been suspended in anybody’s behalf, nor would they ever be. What man hoped, he said, was by some magic to separate cause and ef fect. Yet, in a sense, this is what is still being attempted by our society. The moral climate of our time is to shun the long way. In the make-believe radio and television we see in a moment’s time for tune# made and lost. Thousands and thousands are sustained by your government for services of value and of none. Since World "War 11, we have raised a gen eration of students on monthly checks. Most of our national advertis ing has cheapened our concept of manners, attainment and art by reducing them to the level of easv lessons, bv, claiming that, with the purchase of this nos trum, this may be Even with the national maga zines and nress, the tendency now is to dilute, to Water down for wider and wider consumption bv standardized minds. Ficton itself must subscribe to an ap-/ proved formula, else publishers guarantee no sale. We live in a time of shortcuts, digests, and synopses—which it self is indication that there is little time to read. ’ In addition, oublishers must compete now with, the druggists in offering you prescriptions for success; for success in mind and body, for .success here and in the hereafter, too. The list of books i« less appalling than the size of their sales. * Finally, even our schools have succumbed. Coronal* the, curri cula in both the hlgff schools and ecl'eces of todav with thos“ of twenty-five years ago. Here again we 'have contrived to save youth the labor to read, the labor to think. We no tonrer empha size humanities. We teach teeh niones. Schedules are filled wifli games, dances and songs. Courses reouiring Mental • exer tion—honest and sustained ef fort—-have been dropped one hy , This is not I heliew, a mere Question of an annual prophecy of doom. T should lik“ to Con sider it. rather, a® a plea for a not of this state, ‘that he had been in correspondence with a vice president of one of the large industrial companies of Aferica. In the exchange of let ters, the dean was told that if the colleges allowed further com promise in substance and stand ards, industry of this country would be compelled to take over the training of its own person nel—compelled by the default of our schools. Hereupon, we reach a conclu sion which I believe can be con fidently claimed: that educa tion cannot be the function of the schools solely. The schools cannot work against parents, press and state. If it is the prov ince of the college to provide historical perspective for the student, and to restate for him the value of humanistic thought, what chance does that restate ment have when the student does not hear of it again beyond the college wall? How can the colleges convincingly sustain those values not even regarded by a materialist society to be important? One of the anomalies of our time is the insistence on maintaining an artificial area of standards against the very back ground in which the same standards are not even credited. The student coming from the world outside cannot quite be lieve that an historical view of man has any importance for him. He must see its relevance to his own need before he will accept it. Society has already dem onstrated for him a need of an other sort. Perhaps this is the] reason that the coUege seems unreal to the town, and that each seems unreal to the other. Does it not now appear prob able that an agreement must be reached concerning what the two must seek? Ours has been caUed a ma- * terialistic age. We need go no further than ourselves to dis cover its name. What men do we honor? What actions and deeds do we applaud? What in our secret hearts are our idols? Then, we wiU begin to know where our values lie. At least, let us recognize the fact that the school can go no further than the will of the people allows, that the school can leave with opr children no value which we do not honor ourselves. This brings us to a point which must come to each of us with a sense of shock: that our basic heritage both religious and cultural has never been, and is not now, guaranteed. The very preservation of Western European society which we pre sume to be etemaUy ours by ac cident of birth has had to be actively defended and fought for from its inception until this mid 20th century. Even our right of assembly here has come at the price of all our wars. Perhaps the gravest injustice we can do is to fail to realize that the forces against civilized tradition are everywhere active and everywhere real. Does it not follow, then, that the burden which lies upon society is not to percieve from what source only to defend itself, but first, its opposition will come? One of the most pathetic fig ures in the whole area of human endeavor is that figure engag ing all his good will, energy and time against the trivial and in consequential, thinking all the while that - he is engaging the —§chenla| ' Jw/ Mm R vC' • f - 1 f / / J j(L .Jw $ O 95 • O 4 ' ,r JmT lL>y: SCHENIEY Dismiss CO . N. Y C BIENDED • WH4BICEY, 84 MOOf. 64* GRAIN NEUTRAL SRMMT3 THE CHOWAN HERALD, EDENTON. NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, I9S«. j' ■. ■■ i-■ . : fr * « BELL FOR A BELLE— Ring ing the bell for the fashion house of Dior is the “Trapeze Line,” introduced and first shown in Paris by Yves St. Laureht. This offering from the collection features a stif fened bell skirt and jacket with standaway collar. Black mohair braid edges skirt and jacket, and ensemble is topped with a natural straw hat in i black velvet. i real foe. Quoting Emerson again, his is the inability to distinguish between the sound of a pop-gun and the crack of doom. Too fre quently we see as a threat to | civilized tradition that which I threatens only a part of the whole. All too often we con strue opposition to our narrow partisan interest as opposition to God’s total scheme. So we call the enemy of mankind that which is in fact enemy to in dividual greed. I Here, then, in part, is the function of our schools. Here is the never-ending obligation on our part to maintain those areas in our midst in which effort is! unceasingly made to define real! values, to distinguish between! the true and the sham, and to guarantee, without fear, everlast. I ing freedom of pursuit. And here, it seems, is, in part,, a statement of the obligation which youth cannot deny with out doing itself irreparable harm, the obligation which it has as sumed by virtue of its years of school. In comparison with the unnumbered hordes of the earth, these few of our schools are an infinitely small group who have been given a history of the time of man. Their responsibility the Greeks stated. And just to the extent that youth refuses, to that same extent does it fail to rea lize a part of itself, to that ex tent does it diminish society. Its obligation is in proportion to happiness, is measurable not in its understanding. Its attainment, comparison with that of others, but according to the degree that it develops its total being. For the first years of our lives, our own hearth, town, and state are geographically all the world. Our mbst personal de sires and needs are in our minds the world’s pains. As for the in habitants of this earth, they are ofily our parents and friends, the people we hail in passing every day. What we know of church and state, our convictions and prejudices, is that which we have inherited. It is a part of the emotional climate into which we | are born. Then as youth we begin to reach out —to discover land be yond land, range beyond farther range, to catch glimpses of other men, other times, to hear of sor row and pain as yet to us un known, to discover masses of the earth’s people living under strange gods, of systems of gov ernment even older than our own, of cultures which flourish ed long before our land had a name. What is it then in reaching out that we do finally learn? That as an individual,- as a state, as a religion, we are merely part of an immense design. Can we any longer feel with author ity that ours is the only way? That our corner of land is the center of the universe and that all others live in our shadow because they to us are unknown? Is it not the real function of the schools to prepare for this dis covery of the world beyond? When we go out from home, the farther we go, the more ob vious our limitations .become, the greater the perspective we achieve upon the place of our birth, even the people we love. Distance and perspective are not always kind. Often with discov eries about ourselves and home, loneliness descends. For re assurance that we are not lost, 1 that home is a fair land, we need !to repudiate all that is strange, ito ridicule and reject that which does not confirm what we al ready believe to be true. Every where we must look for some image of ourselves. Again, nothing less than the acquired wisdom of man, pro tected in our schools and li braries, can hold for our youth the long and lasting view. In these libraries from the great metropolitan facades of marble and stone to the dark, crowded little rooms of remote villages, sometimes unclaimed, some times unknown, does lie in trust what man has saved. If we do go out in distrust of the foreign, in fear of quest, it is probably better that we do not go at all. Os course, this does not mean that home is not fair, that known ways are not sound. It means that such a spirit— blind adherence to that which gives temporary comfort and importance —is not the way of growth. So, perhaps, the final words which were spoken to a graduat ing class may have some relev ance for us all. Let us not 1 ' reject all that is alien nor discredit all that we cannot understand. If we go out with the intention of reducing the world to our scale, we will defeat our education before it , begins. Youth's growth, its maturity, will come when it has the cour age to stretch its understanding to areas where it has never be fore reached. A novelist of this state once remarked, during World War II that as she followed the ac counts of the young men who had gone out into the far places of the world in battle from the little country towns that she knew, that time and again she saw them extending themselves to proportions hitherto un dreamed. In the years ahead let us not deny ourselves so much of life by making all things, all men, ail ideas, into our own image. Let us have the courage, rather, to reach out, to expand our mind and hearts to leave behind some thing created so that men may know that we have not dimin ished, but added to, the life of our time. , wmmi^ aoa Weekly Devotional Column By JAMES MacKENZIE —— l "Behold, the King cometh 1 unto thee ..." (Malt 21:5: words spoken by Jesus on Palm Sunday). Behold thy King. If you are a child of God, your King is Je sus .Christ, King pf Kings and Lord of Lords. Behold Him, con sider Him, for He is unique i* history. Some years ago two agnostics, one a lecturer, the other an au thor, were traveling together, and the lecturer suggested the author write a novel about Jesus, depict- • ing Him as a man, and nothing | more. The lecturer was Robert \ G. Ingersoll, the author, Lew Wallace, agreed, and began work on a novel, Ben Hur. But as he considered Christ he found him self face to face with a Person unique in history and was final ly compelled to confess, with the 1 centurion. “Truly this was the Son of God.” Consider His eternity. Other kings are mortal, He is immor tal. Where is Caesar? Char elmagne? Henry the Fourth? Dead! And the very stones that j marked their graves have crum-i bled into dust. But our Kingj lives forever! Long before the! world was created, He .lived; and 1 long after the last page of his- j tory has been written, He will live. There never was a time He I FOR SALE! KNOWN AS 306 S. OAKUM ST. 5 Room House Lot 58 feet by 126 feet John W. Graham Attorney AMERICA’S FAVORITE FAMILY WAGON...PLYMOUTH ,agaaa» Plymouth carries more ... does more ... provides more family fun than any other wagon in the low-price 3 because it’s BIGGEST IN THE LO]\ -PRICE 3. You can’t buy bigger at any price! Maybe you’re a station wagon family right now. More Americans are each day! But do you know all the really astonishing facts about the Plymouth wagon . . . how much more it gives you than other wagons, at a low budget price? Size alone is only part of it! The Plymouth wagon is big as wagons in the high-price field that cost $5500 and more ... but, in addition to extra size, this glamorous beauty offers a wagonload of other features that are exclusively Plymouth in the low-price 3! You simply can’t get ’em anywhere else in the field. And once you try them ~. learn how little the years-ahead Plymouth wagon costs ... you’ll never settle for less ! Why should yon? Your Plymouth dealer has the money-saving story, and he’s waiting for your visit. They don't come any bigger. station wagons CHOWAN MOTOR COMPANY, Inc. Water and Commerce Sts. n. c. state license NO. a*9 EDENTON ■———aawaWMwMaa mmmmmmmmmrn—m.mmm MaaaMMaMM wasn’t; there will never be a time He won’t be. He was, and is, alive forever! Consider His possessions. Oth er kjngs can place a value on what they possess, but not so Je sus. The world is His, for He made it; He own s the cattle on a thousand hills, the wealth in ev ery mine, the sun, moon, and stars. French kings of old prid | ed themselves on having so many palaces; St. Cloud, Tuileries, Versailles, palais Royale, Luxem bourg; but our King has the whole earth for His palace. The mountains are His picture gallery, the oceans His fountains, the sun His chandelier, the forests His parks, and you and I His servants. Consider His power. Other j kings can gauge their power; so many men, so many ships, soj many weapons. But who can place a limit on the power of, Christ? He has but to speak and ! it is done. Vain it is for kings of earth to set themselves against Him (Psalm 2). They are power ful, But He is all-powerful. Consider His compassion, His availability. Other kings look upon their subjects as stepping stones to their own selfish ad vancement, but not our King. He came to minister, not to be ministered unto; to serve, not to be served. Other kings burden their servants down, but not our King. His yoke is easy, and His j burden is light (Matthew 11:28-' 30). Other kings are difficult to j approach, but our King invites' us, indeed, urges us, to come at j any moment with any problem or ( need. Other kings demand court | dress and etiquette, but our King extends as hearty a welcome to the beggar in rags as to the rich man in silk. Is He not a wonderful King? 'ls He your King? Just now, even as you read these words, confess to Him your sins, accept (Him as your Saviour, and crown Him King of your life. ASC Now Seeking Tobacco Workers Raleigh The State ASC of fice in Raleigh has announced plans to recruit 100 men who will be trained as tobacco variety identification specialists. Accord ing to Tilman R. Walker, Chair man of the Agricultural Stabili zation and Conservation State Committee, these temporary em ployees will begin work between j the first and the 15th of June and j the period of work will last from ! §M§ l| I I 1 Plus tax and you* 11 JHI S# 11# RETREAOABLE TIRI look for tho tign of WLtir'e& M WORRY-FREE DRIVING easy-on-your-budget k $6.95 down deferred pay plan jjr $2.00 .weekly SCOTT & ACKISS RECAPPING CO.’) West Eden Street I. demon, X. C. ; PHON’ES: Edenton 26SS—Elizabeth Citv 7513 5 big reasons why your wagon should be a Plymouth: 1 BIGGEST OF THE LOW-PRICE THREE: Big as ) wagons costing thousands of dollars more. You can't buy bigger at any price! 122" wheelbase. O HOLDS SO MUCH MORE THAN THE "OTHER ™ TWO": Over 7 cu. ft. more passenger and cargo Space. Extra “secret luggage” compartment in 6-passenger models. 0 REAR-FACING 3rd SEAT: Folds flush into the floor; you don’t have to store it outside when it’s not in use. Eaay to enter. A DISAPPEARING REAR WINDOW: Rolls down into ■ tailgate. Doesn’t get in the way. Only Plymouth has it in the low-price field. STORSION-AIRE RIDE-AT NO EXTRA COST: Only on Plymouth in the low-price 3. Big-car luxury. No si desway on turn* or noae-dive on stops. !—SECTION TWO PAGE THREE 75 to 90 days. These men, while serving as employees of the State ASC, will visit fields throughout the State on which flue-cured to bacco is planted to determine if the tobacco being grown has characteristics similar to the “dis count varieties”, Coker 139, Coker 140, or Dixie Bright 244. Mr. Walker requests that quali fied persons obtain Application I Forms (SF 57) from their local : post office and file this applica tion with the State ASC Office, State College Station, Raleigh. He emphasized, however, that persons filing must meet certain qualification standards and the fact that they meet these stand ards must be borne out by infor mation on the Form 57, applica tion blank.