Address
Delivered
Before the Two
Literary
Societies
of the
University of
North Carolina,
February 19th,
1976
By Prof.
Albert Coates
Published by Order of the
Philanthropic Society
Remarks of George T.
Blackburn, II, President
Dialectic and Philanthropic
Societies Foundation, Inc.
Mr.
President, honored guests, fellow senators, ladies and gentleman:
In
the early years of the nineteenth century, the Philanthropic Society acquired a
portrait of Johnston Blakely, a naval hero of the War of 1812. Blakely had been
a member of the Philanthropic Society in 1797.
That portrait founded a great tradition of which we are the present
stewards and beneficiaries.
Throughout
the nineteenth century, the two Societies assiduously collected portraits of their
greatest alumni. By the dawn of the twentieth century, the biographical history
of North Carolina could be read upon the walls of these chambers. These were
pantheons of the State's heroes.
But
in those first years of the twentieth century, the halls had not become museums
of a past and envied glory. The air was electric with challenge: North Carolina
had begun to industrialize. Tobacco was making new wealth, and with it were
vanishing the last traces of Southern sorrow and defeat. A sense of expansion
and a sure hope of achievement filled these halls.
In
the fall of q917, Thomas Wolfe stood at this podium and vowed that his portrait
would one day hang beside of that of Governor Zebulon Vance, the State's most
admired hero. Although Wolfe spoke at least half in jest, he did not mistake
his own caliber, nor was he conspicuously advanced from his fellow students.
For in the first two decades of the twentieth century, the University of North
Carolina found its golden age.
It
was as if a modern Jason had gathered together the young heroes of the State to
set them a great task. Here they assembled: Thomas Wolfe, Sam Ervin, Albert
Coates, William Bobbitt, Paul Green, Robert House, Luther Hodges, William
Umstead, John Kerr, Jr., Thad Eure. They came from small communities in a state
of small towns. And they brought with
them the gift that only a small community can give: the sense that one’s own
efforts make a difference to those around him and can make a difference in the
world. That sense is the spark of achievement, and the surest hope of a
democratic people is that it will be engendered in the greatest number of its
youth.
They
came to a university that was still enough of a community to preserve their
sense of self-worth while adding a proper humility for the achievements of past
generations. At the University, these heroes found their Jason. He was Edward
Kidder Graham, President of the University from 1914 to 1918.
Graham
was a native son of North Carolina, the state that had given more men and
materials to the Confederacy than any other state. That sacrifice left this
state in greatest want. In the task of rebuilding, each man learned for himself
the lean virtues of the individual, denuded of materials excess. Their
individual efforts bore fruit, brought wealth, and powered the first wheels of
industry in North Carolina.
But
the industrial and commercial success of the people was posing a threat to
their moral achievement, to their individualism, and to their democratic
self-government. Elsewhere, industrialism had already produced narrow men
performing specialized functions. President Graham saw that threat, and he led
the University to preserve in prosperity the principles and values North
Carolinians had learned in adversity.
What
he did not do is as important as what he did. He did not defend idealism by
belittling the efforts of capitalists. That is the mistake the University has
made in recent years. The faculty and students have voiced an unrelieved
criticism of social practices and commercial efforts common to the State, a
criticism that has estranged them from he people and set them apart from the
efforts and concerns of the State. But Edward Graham enjoyed a keener
intelligence and a broader humanity. He recognized and praised the enterprise of
bankers, industrialists, small-town businessmen and farmers, the people who had
rebuilt North Carolina. And he gave them a new vision, a new challenge to which
all their enterprise might nobly lead them.
Here
is what he told them:
"The
expectation of the people is a compelling prayer. It will be the work of our
section, re-established in nationalism through prosperity, to lead the nation
out of its confusions of materialism, and it will only be through
interpretations of the old ideals. However this may be, I know heroes will come
in commerce, in statecraft, in literature, in religion when the spirit and
temper of the State becomes resurgent through patriotic faith and so liberates
the splendid virtues of constructive materialism from its own unbalanced tyrannies.
To usher in this creative era is in part the glorious privilege of very man and
woman who would play a patriots part in the North Carolina of today and achieve
in the North Carolina of tomorrow the commonwealth for which men have dreamed
and died but scarcely dared to hope."
The
heroes sat before him, ready to usher in that creative era: Thomas Wolfe and
Paul Green in literature; Luther Hodges in commerce; Same Ervin and William
Bobbitt in jurisprudence; and in statecraft, Albert Coates.
We
have assembled here today to add the bust of Albert Coates to those portraits
of distinguished alumni of the two Societies.
I have begun these remarks by attempting to give you some idea of the
historical context in which his achievements began and of the ideals with which
he was inspired by Edward Kidder Graham. In Mr. Coates's writings, Graham's
remarks are frequently quoted. His career as a student paralleled exactly the
years of Graham's presidency. I think, in the creation of the Institute of
Government, Mr. Coates achieved the union of University and State, of education
and citizenship, that Graham advocated.
Albert
Coates came to the University of North Carolina in 1914. During his four years
he distinguished himself as the foremost orator among his fellow students. He
won every major medal in oratory offered by the University: The Freshman
Debater's Medal, the Carr Medal, the Bingham Medal, and the Mangum Medal. To
these he added the prize for the North Carolina Peace Oratorical Contest. His
record of offices includes every major office of the Philanthropic Society,
over which he presided in 1917. He also served as president of the Junior
Class, the Athletic Association and the North Carolina Club. For his services
as a leader, Mr. Coates was inducted into the Order of the Golden Fleece.
Upon
completion of his law studies at Harvard University in 1923, Mr. Coates
accepted an appointment as Assistant Professor of Law at the University of
North Carolina. In 1925 he became an Associate Professor of Law, and began his
tenure as full Professor of Law in 1927, a post which he maintained until his
retirement from the teaching faculty in 1962.
It
was significant to Mr. Coates that he entered directly upon his career as a
professor of law without interval of actual practice. This omission arouse in
him a curiosity about the practical world of laws in which he had not
participated and about which he could not inform his students. This curiosity
engendered a methodical study. Mr. Coates brought sitting justices and
practicing lawyers of North Carolina to his criminal law classroom to provide
the practical experience of the bar to his students.
The
gap between the practical and the theoretical occurred to Mr. Coates in the
field of public administration of laws as well. He sought to gain an
understanding of the problems of administration. He joined police forces,,
participated in investigations, testified at trials as a police investigator,
worked with solicitors, sat on juries, investigated prison conditions for the
State. He discovered in city councils and county offices that the problems of
city and county governments were becoming more and more complex as the field of
government services was rapidly expanding. That complexity was making
democratic self-government, with its constant turnover of officials, more and
more difficult. Some method of educating the newly elected public officials and
of keeping officers of the law informed as to changes in state laws and new
enforcement techniques was needed if law and the democratic system were to meet
the practical complexities at hand.
But
now the nation had entered the Great Depression. There was not enough money to
finance existing institutions, much less to experiment with new and untried
ones. Only a man who had won the Peace Oratorical Prize in 1918, the year of
the Great War, could have persuaded contributors to assist the new venture. The
hardships, sacrifices and near failures out of which the Institute f Government
arose were as exacting as he early struggles of the University itself to take
root in the wilderness of North Carolina. But its success was ascertain as the
need it answered.
Mr.
Coates gathered a small faculty of talented men, and the promise of the
Institute became apparent to the multitude of officials it aided. When money
for salaries drained away, Mr. Coates persuaded his law students to work
part-tie to keep the Institute alive. As prosperity slowly returned, the
Institute expanded rapidly beyond its facilities. It became a vital adjunct of
local governments across the State. Policemen, city councilmen, mayors, county
commissioners, legislators, civic club members, men and women who had never
attended the University of North Carolina, now found in its Institute of
Government a practical and constant aid in the conduct of their political life.
Here was realized Edward Kidder Graham's dream of planting the University in
the daily democratic life of the people of North Carolina.
Mr.
Coates brought the Institute of Government to secure success in 1959 with the
erection of its present building on the eastern gateway of the University.
Three years later, in 1962, he retired as director of the Institute.
These
literary societies were first to recognize Mr. Coates's achievements. In 1951
he was awarded the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies Award for Public
Service. This was followed by the University's O. Max Gardner Award in 1952,
the John J. Parker Award of the North Carolina Bar Association in 1964, and the
North Carolina Award in 1967. More recently he has been honored by the
announcement that the projected building to house the North Carolina
Association of County Commissioners and the North Carolina League of
Municipalities will bear his name.
Since
his retirement in 1962, Mr. Coates has devoted his talents to the study and
development of what he calls the "flying buttresses of government."
These are the civic organizations, student governments and public school civic
curricula that train and provide the ordinary citizen with opportunities for service
to his community and state. He has written articles, books and texts, given
talks and held workshops to promote the history and ideals of citizen groups.
These efforts were recognized by the General Assembly of North Carolina upon
joint resolution of the two houses in May of last year. That work continues
today.
Before
closing these remarks I must supply the obvious omission that those who have
known and worked with Mr. Coates have no doubt noticed. In 1928 Mr. Coates
married Gladys Hall. That marriage was as fortunate for this University and for
these Societies as it was for Mr. Coates. It should be counted among his
foremost contributions to the State. Mrs. Coates is not native of this state,
nor was she a graduate of this University. But she has researched the history
of the University with greater diligence than has any of its graduates. Much of
the credit that there still exists a collection of Societies' portraits to
which we might add the bust of Mr. Coates belongs to Mrs. Coates. He research and
talks kept alive public interest in their welfare. The fruits of her research
will be borne in publications during the next few years on many aspects of the
history of the University and State.
Mr.
President, it is a privilege for the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies
Foundation to comply with the Societies request that we add this bust of
Professor Albert Coates to those portraits in our care. It was sculpted by Mr.
William E. Hipp III, a native North Carolinian and a recent graduate of the
University of North Carolina at Charlotte. The likeness is remarkable, and the
work itself is a fitting testimony to the forceful personality it portrays.
Now,
as a member of the joint Senate of these Societies, I request that privileges
of the floor be extended to Professor Laurens Walker, Mr. Donald Hayman,
Chancellor N. Ferebee Taylor, and the Honorable Terry Sanford for remarks in
honor of Mr. Coates. Thank you.
Response to
the Recognition By the Joint Senate
of the
Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies
By Albert Coates, Professor
Emeritus of the Law School of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Thursday Afternoon, February
19, 1976
I
Samuel
Johnson, the 18th-century English philosopher, was called into the
King's quarters in London one morning for a visit. His was a signal honor for a
literary man. His friends wanted to know what was said in the meeting and
arranged a testimonial dinner for him. He told them that in the course of the
conversation the King had complimented him highly on a book he had written.
"What did you say to the King?' his friends inquired. "I took him at
his word," Samuel Johnson replied. "Who am I to bandy civilities with
my sovereign?"
And
who am I to bandy civilities with those who have preceded me on this program
tonight? I listened to their remarks with exceeding care. They have put every
paling in the fence, and I am satisfied of their correctness to the last
detail.
"Don't
let this recognition go to your head," remarked one of my friends on
hearing of the honor your are conferring on me tonight. "Where else should
it go?" I answered. "My head is the only part of me that can
appreciate the honor and articulate a response." On second thought, I must
qualify that answer, for my head has signaled my body and the answering thrill
of appreciation goes all the way to my toes and comes back again in a total
response to your gracious action.
In
the book of Genesis, it is written that "god formed man of the dust of the
ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life." I saw Mr. Hipp,
the sculptor, look at me, pick up a mass of clay without form and void, and
start working with it day after day until he got it in the shape you see
tonight. He must have breathed into it something of the breath of life, for
when it was first seen by Novella Harriss, who comes to my home one day a week
to help with the housecleaning, she said to my wife: "It looks just like
Mr. Coates opening his lips to say, 'Novella, it's a great life if you don't
weaken."
II
I
am happy that this recognition of me has come by way of the Dialectic and
Philanthropic Literary Societies, co-operating in this Joint Senate. Let me
tell you why:
When
Hinton James came to this campus on the 14th day of February, 1795,
he found: Old East building, the president's house, a pile of lumber for
building a steward's house, a mass of yellow clay dug out for the foundation of
a chapel, and one faculty member, who had been waiting for him since January 15th
when the University opened its door.
He
was the one lone and lonesome ember of the student body. Two weeks later he was
joined by Maurice and Alfred Moore of Brunswick, Richard Eagles of New Hanover,
William Sneed of Granville, John Taylor, and three Burton brothers of Orange.
There were forty-one students to keep each other company by the end of the term
in July, and one hundred by the end of the year.
The
books provided for the students by the Trustees included: Whittenhall's Greek
Grammar; Homer and the Greek Testament; Latin authors including Sallust, Cicero,
Virgil, Horace, Lucian and Xenophon; and gestures to the English language
including Webster's Grammar, and Scot's Dictionary.
The
students had come from rural surroundings to an even more rural setting on top
of a high hill in Orange County to which the ruins of an old English Chapel had
given the name o Chapel Hill. In this strange place they were studying still
stranger tongues, spoken in civilizations long since vanished, by men and women
long since dead.
Misery
must have loved company in those days as well as in these, for on the 3rd
day of June, 1795, the students got together in a society where they could
speak to each other in a language of their own. They called it "The
Debating Society." They must have believed that competition was the life
of education as well as the life of trade, for on the 2nd day of
July they divided the Debating Society and called the new organization
"The Concord Society." Thereafter the Debating Society took the name
of the Dialectic Literary Society and the Concord Society took the name of the
Philanthropic Literary Society. They began competing with each other in
everything: in debates, in orations, in compositions, in putting tombstones for
their respective members who died in Chapel Hill.
III
In
these Societies students began teaching themselves what they were not being
taught by the University faculty.
There
was no English Department, so they began teaching themselves English: by way of
written compositions which were read at their weekly meetings and criticized by
fellow students who took the critic's job seriously; and by way of orations and
debates within the societies, between the societies, and between colleges and
universities.
There
was no University library, and since they needed books, newspapers and periodicals
as source materials for their intellectual activities, they started to building
their own libraries which grew from 2,000 volumes by 1812, to 6,000 by 1835, to
10,000 by 1854, to 16,000 by 1858. Their periodicals included the London and
Westminster Review, the London Quarterly, the New York Review, the North
American Review, and a variety of others.
There
was no force outside themselves which could make rules and regulations for
their meetings, set standards of conduct inside the society halls, and carry
those standards to the campus outside, and they taught themselves to do these
things for themselves. It was their contributions to the faculty and trustees n
the campus.
From
1795 to the 1860's and into the early 1900's, these societies continued their
self-educating and self-regulating activities. The faculty and trustees
recognized their effectiveness in the life of the University to the point that
they required all students to be a member of one society or the other. They
were the only students on the campus--excepting freshman, sophomore, junior,
and senior classes.
They
worked their way into the life of the University to the point that when New
East and New West Buildings were erected in the 1850s, one floor in each
building was provided for Society Hall, along with dormitory rooms and
classrooms.
The
Society members taxed themselves, and called on their alumni for added help, to
furnish these halls, until they could say that "rich damask curtains from
the looms of France are suspended from window arches, the floor is spread with
neat carpeting," and "420 pivoted chairs upholstered with scarlet
velvet."
"From
the walls of the societies," said a letter to their alumni in the 1820s,
"hang portraits of various state worthies, like guardian Genii of the
place, looking with complacency on the efforts on the young hope of the
state," and they looked forward to seeing their "walls covered with
portraits, and our niches filled with busts of North Carolina's distinguished
sons."
After
the University of North Carolina opened its doors in 1795, Governor Alexander
Martin expressed the hope that from this University would come "men of
ability to fill the departments of government with reputation," and in the
year 1830 Chief Justice Thomas Ruffin of the Supreme Court of North Carolina
wrote this letter to members of the General Assembly of North Carolina, saying:
"The
seven or eight hundred of the alumni of Chapel Hill, now fill with honor to
themselves and the College and with usefulness to their country most of her
posts of distinction, trust, labor, and responsibility in her legislatures, her
Judiciary, her professions, her schools. Many who have sought employment and
homes in distant sections of the Union make us favorably known in Sister States
. . ."
The
University of North Carolina was thirty-five years old when Chief Justice
Ruffin wrote that letter. Most, if not all, of the men he was talking about
were men who had been members of the Dialectic and philanthropic Literary
Societies.
Professor
Albert Bushnell Hart, Historian of Harvard University, visited the University
of North Carolina in the early spring of 1892, and "when he returned to
Cambridge he told his students that he had heard a debate in the United States
House of Representatives and one in the Dialectic Society at the University of
North Carolina and that the collegiate boys had beat the Congressmen." He
wrote a chapter in a book on "The Art of Debate", saying that the
"machinery of debate took its most effective form in two rival systems,
such as the Whig Clio at Princeton,, Philanthropic and Dialectic of the
University of North Carolina, Philolexian and Barnard of Columbia, and the
Union and Forum of Harvard."
The
Societies were playing a great part in the lives of students of my college
generation, 1914to 1918: there were many of us who put more hard, solid, and
rewarding work into these societies throughout those years than we put into all
other student activities combined. We went out from campus owing more to them
than all other student activities put together.
They
were no longer the dominating student organizations of the 1790's and 1800's,
but they were still at the heart and center of student life. Their halls were
full at their Saturday night meetings. And they were filling Gerrard Hall at
their intersociety and inter-collegiate debates.
IV
They
began to lose their all-inclusive grip on campus in the early 1900's as the
University began to outgrow the limitations of a small liberal arts college. As
University departments began to take over services which had been given to
students by the societies alone. As the Law School and Medical School and
Graduate School came into being and began to bring in students with specialized
interests who did not feel the need for services the societies provided for
their members. As the University ceased to require students in these
professional and graduate schools to join the Societies. As new student
organizations grew up to minister to specific student needs.
When
the Societies ceased to include significant parts of the student body and lost
their jurisdiction over them, they were no longer adequate to the task of law
and order--which is a seamless web, and the Student Council was organized to
represent the student body as a whole and to take on the student governing
responsibility. But it should be pointed out that it was the cohesive
experience of the two societies and the continuing moral force of their
traditions that provided the underpinning of the newly organized Student
Council in its early days.
When
the University library began to grow to meet the general and specialized needs
of an expanding faculty and student body, the Societies transferred their
16,000 volumes to help build the general library for the whole University on
its way, with the legend, "Endowed by the Dialectic and Philanthropic
Literary Societies," pasted on the opening page of every book in
recognition of their continued underpinning.
The
student forums bringing outside speakers to the campus today are reminders of
the practice of the Societies in bringing outside speakers to the campus to
talk at the annual Society reunions and the Commencement exercises throughout
the 1800's.
The
intercollegiate debates now in the hands of the Division of Speech in the
English Department are reminiscent of the intra-society contests, and the
intercollegiate contests of my own student days.
The
interscholastic contests conducted by many departments in the University are
reminiscent of the high school debates started by the Dialectic and
Philanthropic Literary Societies in 1913 and later taken over by the University
Extension Division.
The
Music Department, the Drama Department, and the Art Department of today grew
out of student glee clubs, student dramatic clubs, and student artistic
interests of earlier years, and this process still goes on in a continuing
pattern of stimulus and response.
V
With
all of these organizations and activities competing for the time and attention
of students, the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies weakened in vitality,
began to lose their way, and resorted to face-lifting operations. They changed
their names from the Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies to the
Philanthropic Assembly in 1919, and to the Dialectic Senate in 1925. This new
look saw the same old things. By 1959 they resorted to the device of sitting
together as a Joint Senate, with members of the Di and Phi sitting on opposite
sides of the hall. The Joint Senate had a slow and desultory growth from 1959
to 1967, became quite active in 1967-1968, and then declined again.
For
many years the projecting power of old traditions has kept the Di and Phi
Societies going. Let me illustrate my meaning: The Philanthropic Assembly lost
all of its members during World War II. The Dialectic Senate barely survived,
and one of its members, Robert Morrison, editor of the Daily Tar Heel, got the
Philanthropic Assembly going again. In 1971 the membership of the Joint Senate
of the Dialectic and Philanthropic Societies dwindled to one, Stanley Greenberg
of Orange County, who was to graduate in June. Mr. Greenberg didn't want to see
these ancient institutions die on his hands, and went out to persuade other
students to join with him in a blood transfusion to keep them going. Thirteen
students agreed. Here are their names:
Hugh
Joseph Beard, Jr. from Alamance
County Phi
George
T. Blackburn, II from Vance
County Phi
David
G. Changaris from New Jersey Phi
Mark
Keating from Mississippi Phi
Phillip
Micheals from Pitt
County Phi
James
Uzzel from South
Carolina Phi
Oliver
K. Bagwell, Jr. from Buncombe County Di
Joseph
Bryan Cumming, Jr. from Georgia Di
William
Lapsley, Griffin, Jr. from Buncombe
County Di
Howard
Alan Lipton from Durham County Di
Joseph
P. McGuire from Buncombe County Di
William
Francis Mignuolo from New
York Di
Charkes
Christopher potter from South
Carolina Di
If
these societies were born in the lives of students on this campus in the
1790's, they were born again in the lives of Stanley Greenberg and his thirteen
associates in the 1970s.
VI
These
men found the records of the Societies from 1958 to 1970scattered and in
complete disorder, and that the records of their proud history from 1795 to
1958 were unknown to the new members.
Here
is what they did. They gathered all the records that could be located and
arranged them for deposit in the University Archives in Wilson Library. Partial
minutes were transcribed and supplemented to provide, as nearly as possible, a
record of the difficult period in the Societies' history from 1958 to 1970.
They began systematically to index and review the minutes and papers from the
first meeting of June 6, 1795 to their own time. This work is nearly complete.
They kept thorough records of their own meetings and activities, adopting the
forms used by the Societies in earlier days. And the culled from old Yackety
Yacks, roll books and minute books, the names of their alumni since 1887 to
update the last catalogue of members.
They
found the portraits in deplorable condition--some gashed, some misplaced, many
decaying for lack of proper care, and familiar only to scholars of University
and State history.
Here
is what they did. They searched all University buildings to find missing
portraits and locate known portraits that had been loaned for display. They
devised a biographical index to familiarize their members with the great men of
the Societies' history. They formed a foundation to restore the entire
collection of paintings and other art objects and to provide for their permanent
care in future years. This was an effort requiring tens of thousands of
dollars. And they raised it all.
They
found that intercollegiate debates, once conducted by the Societies, had been
shifted to the Debate Council, which was established by the Societies in the
early 1920's, and shifted from the Debate Council to the Speech Division of the
English Department in the 1960s. Only the Mangum Medal competition is still
operated by the Societies.
They
found the weekly meetings non-existent. Students seemed to have little interest
in participating in activities like debate and discussion requiring a great
deal of work, when there were too many forms of entertainment at the University
requiring no effort at all. There was the great carnival of moves, rock music
concerts, exhibitions, public speeches, social entertainments, and spectator
athletic events.
Here
is what they did. They began meeting twice a month and publishing a newspaper
to advertise their activities. They invited faculty members to debate each
other on topics of current events and history. They began inter-society debates
and public readings to improve their own speaking abilities. Their membership
began to grow, albeit at slow and fluctuating rates. But they were on their
way.
VII
It is
an inspiring thing to me that the sole surviving member of these societies in
1971 did not want them to die on his hands and that students responded to his
appeal and helped him keep them alive. It is an inspiring thing to me that
these students started in systematic fashion
to gather up the ragged ends of old traditions and put their records in
order, make an inventory of their properties, locate the portraits of their
famous men, restore them as nearly as possible to their original condition,
rescue a quarter of a million dollars in cash values that were going down the
drain, and provide weekly programs good enough to attract attendance of their
members. These activities are worthy of the traditions of the Dialectic and
Philanthropic Literary Societies at their historic best.
With
all of these inspiring activities underway, the question facing every student
in this room tonight is this: Granted that you have got these Societies going
again, have you got them going to the point that they will keep on going when
you are gone?
VIII
In
1976 you are involved in a more difficult undertaking than your predecessors in
1795 and throughout the 1800's. Let me illustrate my meaning: They had few if
any competing attractions to contend with. The Saturday night meetings in the
Society halls were about the only places for students to go to, and that was in
great measure true in 1914 when I came here as a freshman. There were no paved
roads, automobiles were few and far between, and no one was raising his thumb
for a weekend ride out of town unless he has the St. Vitus Dance. In 1976 the
Societies have lost the competition with the automobile and the hard-surface
road and weekend exits to the point that they have moved their periodic
meetings to the middle of the week.
There
is another reason for the drift away from Society halls as student centers, the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill offers a far richer mixture of
opportunities to students in 1976 than it offered to students in the 1800's and
early 1900's: in volume and variety of its courses of instruction, in the
reaches of its libraries and laboratories, in the multiplicity of organizations
and activities competing for a student's time and attention. This is
illustrated by the fact that intercollegiate debates were transferred from the
Societies and Debating Council to the Speech Division of the English Department
because it could give them systematic instruction in the art of public
discussion and debate that the Societies could not compare with. This transfer
is all the more significant because it was made at the request of the students
themselves.
It
is related in the New Testament that Jesus of Nazareth was urging his disciples
to undertake a course of action which He thought was worthwhile and got this
question from the disciple Peter, reflecting what was going on I the minds of
all of the disciples: "Master, what is in it for me?" That, I think,
was a fair and honest question two thousand years ago. It is, I think, a fair
and honest question for every student to ask of every campus organization
soliciting his membership in 1976: What is in it for me? That is a question the
Dialectic and Philanthropic Literary Societies have to answer.
Look
at their fluctuating membership after World War II. Look at their fluctuating
membership in recent years: down to one surviving member at the beginning of
the 1970s, up to 14 in 1971 with new members coming in on a death bed appeal
from Stanley Greenberg, down to 7 in 1973, up to 20 in 1974 and 45 in 1975.
Whether it will keep on going up or down from year to year is still uncertain.
These fluctuating figures suggest that calls like Stanley Greenberg's call may
be enough to get the Societies going again, and again, and again, but they are
not enough to keep them going. Sooner or later students will begin asking: What
is in these Societies for me? In return for membership dues and the time I put
into meetings and programs, what is my take-home pay?
Lasting
life and steady growth call for a two-way street. They call for student-getting
as well as student-giving. It may be more blessed to give than to receive, but
if it is all giving and no receiving, the giving is likely to give out as soon
as students find out that instead of priming the pump they are filling the
well. And that is as it ought to be. Let me tell you why.
As
member of the Philanthropic Society, Charles B. Aycock, left this campus in the
1880's and ran for Governor of North Carolina at the turn of the century,
saying to the people: "If you vote for me, I want you to vote for me with
the distinct understanding that I shall devote the four years of my
administration to building up the public schools. I shall endeavor for every
child to get an education." You will notice that he did not say that the
public schools would give an education to any child. He said that the public
schools would give to every child an opportunity to get it for himself.
"What
is education?" called out a heckler from the crowd at one of Aycock's
stump speeches. On the spur of the moment he threw back this answer: "By
education I mean getting out of a boy and girl everything that God Almighty put
into them." He made this meaning more explicit in a later speech affirming
the equal right of every child to have the opportunity to burgeon out of
himself everything there is within him."
Education
is what the University of North Carolina at Chapel hill is all about. It does
not promise to give an education to any student. It does promise to give every
student an opportunity to get it for himself: by studies with the faculty in
the classrooms, by associations with fellow students on the campus, by thinking
to himself as he walks along the campus paths, by curricular and
extra-curricular activities of all sorts and sizes.
To
what extent, if any, can the Dialectic Senate and Philanthropic Assembly
contribute to the education which a student has come here t get? To what
extent, if any, can they help him t get out of himself everything that God
Almighty has put in him? To what
extent, if any, can they increase his take-home pay?
I
am not about to give you advice on how to go about meeting this responsibility.
In my early married days I gave some advice to my wife which I thought then and
think now was good advice. She smiled at me and gave this answer:
"Sweetheart, you have heard of Oscar Wilde's remark that 'all advice is
bad and good advice is worse'?" I got her meaning to the point that years
later when my younger brother asked me for advice in a critical situation, I
replied, "Son, I will give you all the advice you want, provided you will
agree not to take it." He understood what I meant: that I was all for him,
that I wished him well and more than well, that I would give him everything I
had to give, but that he was on his own and could take it or leave it as he saw
fit.
Many
years ago Robert Hutchins, the 28-year-old Dean of the Yale Law School, visited
the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington, D.C. One of the crusty
old Justices jovially slapped him on the back and said in great good humor:
"Well, here is our boy Dean who is teaching his Yale law students that the
Supreme Court of the United States doesn't know any law." "Oh, no,
Mr. Justice," replied Dean Hutchins, "we let the boys find that out
for themselves." And that is what the Dialectic and philanthropic
Societies have got to do.
While
you are working to find out for yourselves how to keep these Societies going
after you are gone, you can, I think, thank God and take courage from these
facts:
The
records show that the students in the oxford and Cambridge Union in Great
Britain never wearied of well-doing, that they never lost their way, that the
quality and calibre of their discussions and debates in this day and generation
rises to, and sometimes surpasses, the level of discussion and debate in the
British Parliament. You have seen and heard them for yourselves on television.
The
records show that the students of this day and generation have abilities as
great if not greater than students of former generations, and that they have
more information and knowledge to bring to bear on current issues and problems
than their predecessors ever had in their day an generation, and more of them
have greater interest in public affairs than any generation I have ever known.
I
believe these resources can be brought to a focus in the quality and calibre of
public discussion and debate going on in the Dialectic and Philanthropic
Society has from week to week, giving more take-home pay to every participating
member--if that is what you want to do, and if you are willing to pay the
price, and if the price is worth your time and effort.
There
are some among you in these Societies who have spent a lot of time in searching
for scattered records and in putting them in order, and in locating scattered
portraits and restoring them to face value and laying foundations for keeping
them restored through future generations--as much time as they have put in
studying any exacting college course. I know they feel that their labors have
been worth their while. I believe that the same amount of time put on studying
the topics for public discussion and debate in your regular meetings will be
worth the while of those who do this work, and worth the while of those who
come to listen to what they have to say.
Let
me illustrate my meaning: Students in the University are now preparing a
Symposium on this campus in march on problems in the third American century,
including such problems as" population growth; food shortage; pollution of
the heavens above, the earth beneath, and the waters down under the earth; the
energy crisis; the rapidly emerging third world; and so on. Most, if not all of
these questions carry the connotation of life and death to every one of you.
You will be grappling with them all of your lives. There is nothing in the law
of the land, or in the Constitutions of North Carolina and the United States,
to prevent you from studying and discussing these problems while you are
students on this campus.
Let
me throw out this suggestion for your consideration:
Select
a committee of ten of your ablest members.
Let
the go to work to make up a list of ten or more of the most vital questions of
this day and generation.
Let
them put this list of questions the agree on into the hands of all members of
this joint Senate and ask each person to study it and make up his own list of
ten most vital issues, adding or subtracting from the initial list , and turn
it back to the committee to put together a consensus of the thinking of all
members.
Let
them arrange for a full-scale discussion and debate on these priorities at one
or more regular meetings of the Joint Senate when there is no other business to
be discussed.
Allocate
the greed-on topics to as many meetings of the Joint Senate and schedule them
for the fall term of this year--1976.
Assign
the topics to members of the Joint Senate by the end of April, so they will
know the topics they are to discuss and when, and thus give them the time to
study and prepare themselves to turn their discussions and debates into great
occasions worthy of the time and the
attention of their fellow members, and let their fellow members at each meeting
join in a free-for-all discussion.
Think
of what such a program carried out in the fall and spring terms for four years
could mean in the present and future life of every member of these Societies.
I
believe that some such experiment as this might enable students in these
Societies to lift themselves by their own bootstraps into a program which can
contribute as much to their education as any course in any classroom in the
University, a program which continued from year to year would make these
societies mean to their members throughout the 1800's and into the early
1900's.
In
the early 1800's, William Rufus King of Sampson County, left the University to
become Congressman from North Carolina, Secretary of the Legation to Russia,
United States Senator from Alabama for thirty years, Minister to France, and
soon elected Vice president of the United States. In 1838, at the height of his
career, he wrote this letter to his society, saying:
"To
sustain the honor and advance the prosperity of [the Philanthropic Society]
constituted at one period of my life, the strongest feeling of my nature; it
entwined itself around every fiber of heart, and stimulated all of my energies.
Time and diversified pursuits have weakened, but not extinguished that feeling.
I still exult in the success of the white badge; nor in the palmy days of
Rome's grandeur did the 'I am a Roman citizen' command more of confidence and
respect than 'I am a member of the Philanthropic Society' does for me."
When
Turner, the great English artists, was painting his glorious sunsets, and
cynics commented that they had never seen sunsets like them, Turner replied,
"Ah, but don't you wish you had?" And to those of this day and
generation who say they have never seen societies like the Dialectic and
Philanthropic Societies of the 1800's, described by William Rufus King and
Albert Bushnell Hart, let me give this answer: Don't you wish you had?