■ OTHER EDITORS SAY - V . K. WRAU-TV VIEWPOINT ■ . A Statistical Academic Nonsense in statistical ow it can be used to mislead the people, may be gleaned from a spate of curi ously similar editorials which have suddenly appeared in a good many of the state’s larger daily newspapers in recent weeks. It smacks of a sort of petty conspiracy; yet it is a de grading and dangerus one. It has an unmistakable political taint; but its real victim — in the end — may well be the schools of North Carolina. The editors am operating be hind a self-assigned facade of no bility. Their pious pretense is that they are demanding better education for the young people of the state. What they are really doing is using the schools, and the teachers and administrators who operate them, as pawns in a smearing, sneering numbers game. The school people of this state deserve better than this. Certainly they do not deserve back-handed suggestions that education in North Carolina has not made great strides towards excellence — much less'statisti cal misrepresentations to the ef fect that the people of this state have not made great sacrifices to build a school system of which they can be proud. No barrage of irrelevant, odious compari sons should mislead the people of North Carolina into being ashamed of their achievements. One hardly knows where to begin in beating back the brush fire of statistical nonsense pour ing forth from the newspapers’ editorial pages. So it costs the taxpayers of New York vastly more, per student, to. operate public schools than ia the case in North Carolina! So what? What the editors don’t compare is the cost of living in New York as opposed to that in North C a r o li n a. Of the cost of land for school sites in New York. Or the cost of construc tion there. A school teacher in New York often pays as much each month for a place to park her car as a teacher in North Carolina spends on groceries. If the news papers want to get into an hon eat set of comparisons, let’s have some on the cost of living, the cost of doing business, the cost of operating schools. Then let’s see how North Carolina, and North Carolinians, compare with New York and New Yonkers in this business of “sacrifice”. Other comparisons? Well, Just for example, part of the “per student” cost of operating schools is the interest'that the state pays on borrowed money used for school construction. The Statistical Abstract of the United States, published by the U. S. Department of Commerce, reveals that in 1964, New York State paid-$90 million in interest, on money it had borrowed for school construction. That same year, North Carolina pjrid ten million dollars in interest on her school debi.That $80 million dif ference alone raises New York’s “per pupil” cost by $40 per year! We acknowledge, of course, that our own comparisons are themselves largly irrelevant, and we mention them simply to illus trate a point. New York simply cannot be compared to North Carolina, any more than apples can be compared with oranges. The two states are entirely dif ferent entities, with differing conditions, differing costs, and differing economies. And we may as well say it: What North Carolinian would trade living conditions with his counterpart in New York? True enough, progress in any field — education or anything else — will always be an uphill climb. We have a long way to go, and when every person now alive in both North Carolina and New York is gone, there will still be goals to achieve and pro gress to be made. But that if no reason forpeUticalfy-motivited newspaper editors to shame and degrade those who have worked so .hard and achieved so much in our own time. North Carolina needs to apolo gize to no one, least of ul to any newspaper editor, for what has been done in the' field of education in our state.,This sta tion stands second to nobody in its support for adequate, compen sation and the most efficient working conditions for our teachers. But it is important to remember that not the least among the problems being en "Helping to build a better Livestock Market (or Eastern North Carolina” WHAT IS THE ANSWER? by Henry E. Garrett, Ph.G Professor Emeritus, Psychology, Colombia Universi Past President, American Psychological AssecMii Q: Dr. Garrett, can a parson's IQ ba changad? I .saw a naws story that said a young girl's IQ was ralsad 40 points. How can that ba? ■ ."t. ■!' A: Ordinarily, no, a person’s IQ cannot be increased. Even so, it is possible through intensive training to raise a person’s IQ dured by our school people are the federal pressures and con trols undo’ which th$y are being forced to operate. And it is of more than passing interest that federal intervention in our schools is being applauded, and even encouraged, by the very same newspapers that repeated ly resort to odious comparisons in falsely implying that educa tion is going to pot in North Carolina. J North Carolinians probably should chuckle at this statistical nonsense and then, after con sidering the source, continue about the business of building a finer North Carolina. If the press is unwilling to help, it should not be allowed to hurt" somewhat but the probabilities are, once training is “broken”, the IQ will return to “normal”. It is much as though you took a normal 14-year-old who could run 100 yards, say, in 12 sec onds and trained him until he could cover thedistance in some ror on all such tests Is five per cent, it is quite possible k score made on one teft would be 10 points higher (or lower) than that made on a second test As to those fantastic eleva tions in IQ; that is poppycock. Your own IQ will tell yop that, Bound Over On Rape Charge 1 Eighteen year-old Thomas Sut ton of La Grange Has been bound over to superior court af ter probable cause of'his guilt was found on a charge pf rape. 1 • V*' «*■;: •Vv* " - 0 Your Medicine Gan Cost Yon Less vivm'er, , V i ' " ^r..V Have Your Prescriptions Filled at MEDICAL CENTER PHARMACY MS N. QvMn StrMt f1 • ' Kinston, N. C. WE WELCOME CHARGE ACCOUNTS WE KEEP INCOME TAX AND INSURANCE RECORDS Walter p. Johnson. R. Ph. Phones let you?’ go shopping on a rainy day without opening your umbrella or digging out your raincoat or putting on your rubbers or catching the sniffles or even stepping out the door. (What else that costs so little saves you all that trouble?) - '• '