THE UNC NEWS Page 3 O. B. Hardison Jr. 'REFLECTIONS' Adds Vitality To UNC Campus Thursday, June 22, 1961 (Dr. Hardison is an Associate Professor of English at the Uni versity. The Editors have asked him to review "REFLECTIONS from Chapel Hill," a new publica tion now on sale in several local stores including the Intimate, the Carolina Coffee Shop and Harry's. Eds.) If little magazines are a sign of vitality on a campus, UNC can af ford to be a little smug. In addi tion to the Carolina Quarterly, three little magazines have been published here in the past three years. First there was Spectrum, then Parlance, and now "REFLEC TION from Chapel Hill." Its pre decessors were quarterlies, but with commendable optimism "RE FLECTIONS" announces itself as a monthly and sells for 40 cents at your local newsstand. Whatever else may be wrong with Chapel Hill, its creative activities seem to be flourishing. I like the cover of "REFLEC TIONS." It reminds me of William Blake. The two feature articles illustrate the desire of Robert Brown, the editor, to make "RE FLECTIONS" "an open forum . . . for independent thinking, free cri ticism, and public discussion." Pro fessor Federico Gill, director of Latin American Studies at UNC, reviews the Cuban situation dis passionately. He takes account of Castro's positive reforms and sug gests that a policy of containment together with liberal economic as sistance to Latin American demo cracies offers the best hope for preventing the spread of Castro ism. ROBERT BROWN'S "Listen, Colored Man" is a more typical little magazine article. Brown ar gues in favor of action here and now. He feels that committees for world disarmament and similar groups are actually escapist and that our real responsibilities are to social abuses which we can do something about. The neo-conser- vatives are so vocal these days that it is refreshing to read an article that sounds like old-style liberalism. However, I was puz zled by Mr. Brown's announce ment that "you and I have been mute witness to the death of the American Negro." In view of school integration, 'sit-ins,' and the freedom riders, I submit that re ports of the death of the Ameri can Negro are grossly exaggerat ed. We certainly cannot be compla cent, but we can be a good deal more optimistic than Mr. Brown. "REFLECTIONS" ends with three drawings which I feel are attractive but inferior to its cover drawings, and a short poem by Richard Pierce titled "Requiem." THE BIG PROBLEM of little magazines is money. "REFLEC TIONS" promises to be a stimulat ing contribution to Chapel Hill's in tellectual life. I hope that studeats and townspeople will support it ac tively, for if it is not supported it will fail, and we will all be the losers. Newt Smith Educator Must Present Different Views Letter God, Kerouac, Pooh Again . To the Editor, The small article entitled "God" that appeared in the June 8, 1961 edition of the UNC News was ap palling. (Filler read: 'Don't you know that God is Pooh Bear? Jack Kerouac' Ed.) May God have pity on anyone who has the stupidity to refer to his Maker as a "Pooh Bear"! It is pathetic to know that some people who have the privilege to obtain a higher education come to feel that they know all there is to know, and regard God as a child's fairy tale. Even though this may be your opinion, we would appreciate it if you would not allow any more atheistic articles such as this one to appear in our campus paper, (s) "Think Twice the Next Time" P. S. How about printing this, I'm sure this opinion is shared by many. (Editor's Note: the Pooh Bear referred to in Kerouac's quote is the Winnie-the-Pooh of A. A. Milne fame. Milne's Pooh books are much more than "child's fairy tales.") STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED to write letters to the editor, and to submit columns on subjects of general interest. There is no edi torial censorship of letters or co lumnsthey may agree or disagree with the editors. In fact, the edi tors particularly encourage letters expressing opposing positions from theirs. There is no restriction on length, within the bounds of rea son. Letters do not have to be type written. The UNC News offices are on second floor, Graham Memorial. PUNISHMENT You may stand them on the trap dotr of the scaffold, and choke them to death, but that act will be infinitely more coldblooded, whether justified or not, than any act that these boys have commit ted or can commit. Clarence Dar row at Leopold and Loeb trial Now that every bite of food we eat is taxed and 23 of that tax goes fo rNorth Carolina educa tion, it is time to evaluate just where our money is going. Some of the money will go to ward physical plant development and improvement. There is no doubt that there is a great need of this portion, but that allotment will not automatically improve the educational standards of the state. Another part will be utilized in the administrative areas of our educational institutions, but this too will not guarantee im provement. The greatest portion of the budget will be applied to the improvement of the state's teachers salaries. This increase is greatly needed and will keep us from having to rely on "Thank God for South Carolina." But will these expendi tures and this supplement neces sarily improve the disgusting and embarasing condition of the state's schools? Although it is true that the low social and economic position of the teacher hinders advancement in educational standards, mere economic aid is not the solution to the problem. Money will induce more people into education and hopefully better people, but the exploding population and increas i n g bureaucratic wastefulness will quickly eat away the mar gins as soon as they are gained, , and as a result the teachers will still be poorly paid and overwork ed. And, finally, standards are not a resultant of economics; they are independent of such material involvement. Perhaps to understand what is involved in the improvement of education it is necessary to first define education. Education should seek to develop the mind in its power and its awareness. It should supply the individual with the knowledge, skills, and values which constitute the culture of his environment. It should also develop the mental processes so that the individual who goes into this environment is capable of adaptation and innovation in ex tracultural experience. To accom plish this education must supply alternate views from those of his strict cultural views. The process of understanding involves first giving up one of these alternate views. Education then is an as similative and critical activity. With this in mind one expects an unusual excellence from the members of this profession and its results. Currently these hopes and expectations are rapidly de stroyed with a quick glance at the educational scene. First of all the educator seems to have forgotten that he must present al ternate views from those of so ciety; he offers only the" cul ture at hand. Occupied with comfort and contentment, this society and culture, if taught, naturally stagnates and petrifies. Unless one learns to make origin al choices in school, he will nev er learn them. But we consistently see, even within educational institutions, a fear of originality, a dread of innovation, a horror of the non conformist, and a disturbing lack of original and creative thought. At the universities one sees that education has come to mean a period of time spent with extra ordinary concern over credits and grades in order to achieve a de gree which is deemed necessary for the acquisition of a job and. its material benefits. Is this an example of excellence? Secondly, the actual instruction of cultural values and knowledge is deficient. The teacher is con ceived as a person with little more training than the layman (not much) and less knowledge than the scholar by a long shot). If this view is predominant con cerning the primary and second ary teachers of our society, then there is a vast failure in our edu cational , system. In fact there seems to be an overpowering dis- "Very Unusual Weather We're Having" mmm a-rwv- Jionesty present if one observes the operation of the schools in the state. When a teacher explains biology while at the same time in sisting that no one mention Dar win, sex, or heredity, there is a basic intellectual dishonesty. Finally the profession itself suf fers a malignancy, a disease which is highly disastrous to the profession. The actual courses in education are held in disrespect and are considered poorly plan ned, excessively proliferated, and totally unnecessary. Most college students assume they are highly uninteresting, most often ridicu lous, and offered only because cf some regretful state requirement To quote Mortimer Smith of the Council for Basic Education: "Child Growth and Development as presently constituted is not a discipline but a cult, and Methods and Materials comes under the heading of tricks of the trade." In essence contemporary edu cators must remember that they are not teaching someone who will be able to utilize the views cf present society he will be operat ing in a future society. They must present valid knowledge with a challenge toward innovation which constantly strains the in tellect of their pupils while giving them incentive and partial re wards to prevent discouragement. The world contemporary children face is not one where their emo tional and social adjustment are of the greatest importance, but where survival in a world-wide holocaust is crucial, or where they must survive in what Krushchev promises to a Communist Ameri - Exchange Student - (Continued from Page 2) ' Sjam prepared a final evalua tion paper for FSLP. It included a description of Carolina. Some random excerpts might give an insight into Sjam himself: "Car olinians are more friendly than persons from other parts of the country" . . . "The Honor and Campus Codes' practices in my opinion are not different from the M.V.D. or the Gestapo" ... "I am rather disappointed to notice the apathy of the greater parts of the student body towards na tional and international prob lems" . . . Sjam is a fine example of wh3t can be accomplished in interna tional and interpersonal under standing by constructive work cf such "radical," broadly-thinking groups as NSA. The Foreign Stu dent Leadership Project is a con crete program, which usually nets concrete results. One of the more pleasant results is Radea Sjamsoeddini Wongsoharsono. CJolfrlUT NOBODY Nobody minds. Nobody cares. Pathetic, that's wf.st it is. V.e can't all and some o; us don't. Thr.:'s all there is to it. We czn't all ga.'c'y and song-and-dance. Here c fo round the mulberry buih ari r.jl that. Eon-f omrny. I'm ret ccm plairJrg. but There It Is. A. A. IT.lr.e (Eeycre)