University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC)

 - Class of 1918

Page 15 of 334

 

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 15 of 334
Page 15 of 334



University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 14
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University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA IV vJ great investigator?, men wlio give themselves unweariedly to pure research, who dwell upon that hill of Truth of whicli Bacon wrote. Tolstoy represents the university as partaking of the life of the people: Arnold thinks of it as the preserver of ideals, a queen of romance, ' a home of lost causes, withdrawn from the passing clamor of an epoch of dissolution and transformation. Bacon also would have it removed from the flux of human struggle and error, in order that it may further, through research, the conquest of abstract truth. One effect of the Great War has been that it has brought all things to test. This test is not merely of physical courage and endurance, of the spirit of heroism, of the willingness to fight and, if need be, to die for that something not ourselves that is identified with justice and right; it is also a test of our conceptions of democracy, of our fitness to champion the ideals which humanity, through a long and painful evolution, has set up against arbitrary and pitiless despotism. Men and institutions are alike tried by fire. This test the university, like other institutions, can not evade. The province of the university may be defined through combining the conceptions outlined a moment ago. It must act as custodian and interpreter of the spiritual inheritance of the ages ; it nuist follow knowledge like a sinking s;ar beyond the utmost bounds of human thought; and it must bring these ideals and this truth to bear on life. In the light of the first of these duties, Kultur and frightful- ness, the ambition for a place in the sun, the false doctrine of the survival of the strongest, are put to a test that shrivels them and burns. Iru the light of the second, the investigator, untouched by the tumult and the shouting of warring hosts, adds bit by bit to the sum of knowledge that pushes back a little farther the realm of chaos and old night. In the light of the third, idealism and truth come down from the mountain top to bring the tables of the law to men. This threefold vision the University of Xorth Carolina has caught. Her years are the years of the American constitution. Her life is a symbol of American democracy in its best and purest form. Sometimes we think her devoid of beauty ; but this ground is holy ground, these buildings sanctuary. True to her spirit, her sons have given themselves freely to make this spirit prevail. In them, her warfare on falsehood becomes concrete. True to her spirit, those who remain arc preparing themselves, in mind and body, for the day when they too may be called upon to front a lie in arms, and not to yield. Thus is the first vision made flesh.

Page 14 text:

1916 YACKETY YACK THE UNIVERSITY AND THE WAR WS?S ' ,EO TOLSTOY somewhere speaks of wliat he calls the female boarding school or JLl cailet-acadcniy conception of a nniversity. The nniversity of his time, he thinks. is aloof from real life; in it boys learn lessons, as in the schools; attending it is going to schoiil. A lietter conception is that of a collection of men for the pnrpose of their mntnal cultnre ; and he explains what tliis means by telling us that such universities, unknown to us. spring up and exist in various corners of Russia ;| in the universuies them- selves, in the students ' clubs, people come together, read and discuss, until at last rules establish themselves when to meet and how to discuss. There you have real universities ! A different idea is expressed by Matthew Arnold, in the description of Oxford that everyone knows by heart ; Beautiful City ! so venerable, so lovely, so unravaged Ijy the fierce intellectual life of our century . . . steeped in sentiment as she lies, and whispering from her towers the last enchantments of the Middle Age, who will deny that Oxford, by her ineffable charm, keeps ever calling us nearer to the true goal of all of us, to the ideal, to perfection, to beauty? And a third conception, older than these, is expressed by Francis Bacon, pioneer of research as a miiversity ideal, when, after speaking of the search for truth as the sovereign good of human nature. he quotes Lucretius; II is a pleasure to stand upon the sliore. and see ships tossed upon the sea ; a pleasure lo stand in the window of a castle, and to see a battle and the adventures thereof below : but no pleasure is comparable to the standing upon the vantage ground of Truth la hill nut to be commanded, and where the air is always cleai; and serene), and to see the errors, and wandermgs, and mists, and tempests, in the vale below. To this he adds merely that the sight of human error and suffering must be with pity, and not with swelling or pride. Each of these conceptions, taken singly, is partial. Tolstoy would define his university by the group of earnest men and women, connected with an institution or not, wno read and discuss serious matters for niuiual culture. He has in mind the Circles of Tchaykovsky, organized in the latter part of the nineteenth century in almost every province of Russia, in whicli university men and women lived with peasants and artisans, and sought not only lo better their circumstances but to implant in them ideals of freedom, seeking also to learn from them sincerity, truth, and their own conceptions of life. But this ideal leaves out of account both that function of the university which makes it the conserver of the accumulated riches of human experience and that not less important function wliich is discharged by



Page 16 text:

1918 YACKETY YACK As to the second, there are scholars Iiere who in Ulirary and lalmratory continue the researcli upon which tlie hfe of the University depends. This work is often unreahzed hy the student-body, hut it is hke the mountain springs at the head of a niiglity river. Therefore, despite changes in courses of study necessary to fit them to the needs of the present, despite the niihiary training that ahsorbs so much of the time and interest of menil)ers of the University, despite the picturesque clianges in the appearance of classroom and campus because of the substitution of the garb of war for academic cap and gown, the scientific and philological societies present their records of research, the learned journals published by tlie University appear with stated regularity, scholarly investigation is quickened, not discouraged, l)y war. The spirit of the University seeks to find the facts and to face them, knowing, witli llu.xley, tliat there is no alleviation for the suffering of mankind except veracity of ihouglit and action, and the resolute facing of the world as it is. From this faitlifulness to the second vision, the University derives its authority. Finally, through the series of Extension Leaflets dealing with questions of war, through the package libraries and the information service, through correspondence courses and lectures on history, science, and literature in the light of the war; most of all through the new organizations in various communities known as Extension Centers, the University brings its idealism and its truth to bear on the troubled life of an age of transformation and agony. Wherever a group of people — in a cla sroum on the Hill, in a country Sunday School, in an Extension Center miles away from the C)ld Well — are brought into contact with this idealism and this truth, there is tlie University in the midst of them. The student who walks a dozen miles on Sunday to tell a little class what he has learned on the Hill, the teacher who adds to his routine work the conference at the distant Center, symljolize the third vision. For the University e.xists not in its physical equipment of classrooms and laboratories, not in its machinery of registration and examination, not in the splendid ceremonies of Commencement. When Brand discovered that the people regarded the building that he gave them as in truth tlie church, he locked the door, threw away the key, and led tliem up the mouiitainsiije. So also the University is a spirit — invisible, intangible, yet real. In these community groups, organized for the study of the national spirit, seeking to make of the community what the members of the community w ' ould have the nation become, the University is at work, finding here high service for a time of war, helping our democracy to create, through vision and truth, its ideals. — Edwin Grf£nla v

Suggestions in the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) collection:

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

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University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

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University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

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University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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University of North Carolina Chapel Hill - Yackety Yack Yearbook (Chapel Hill, NC) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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