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CONTENTS 2 Education and national goals

Sterling M. McMurrin 3 Brief reports

Surplus property
Rehabilitation committee
The deaf at college
Documents service
U.S. Government manual
Opportunities in biology
UNICEF greeting cards

American Education Week 5 Team teaching

Stuart E. Dean 9 Revenue sources for the 1960's

Eugene P. McLoone 13 Preparing the counselor

Carroll H. Miller 15 Technical education

Walter M. Arnold 17 New vigor in science teaching

Albert Piltz 21 Why property accounting

Charles T. Roberts 23 Public schools, biennial data

Emery M. Foster 25 School bonds

Elmer C. Deering 26 Books for the blind

Frederick J. Moffitt 28 Pupil personnel services

Gene C. Fusco 31 AdMinutes 33 Physical fitness of youth

John F. Kennedy 36 OE publications

expresses in a sense the very meaning of democracy, that there is an inevitable coincidence of the good of the individual with the good of the society taken in its totality. It is the common belief that a course of action that genuinely ministers to the dignity and intrinsic value of the individual and cultivates his talents and capabilities and encourages his commitment to high purpose will necessarily build into the social structure and the state a strength that will guarantee their full integrity and their lasting power even in great adversity. But this is an assumption that has never been fully tested by our Nation or any other nation, for in circumstances that have fundamentally challenged the strength of the democracies, as in the event of war, they have resorted to various forms of regimentation that have at certain points suspended the principles and practices normative for a democratic society. This regimentation, together with the emotional power that surges through a society in imminent danger, has strengthened us through the great crises of our past. The question that we now must ask is whether without the regimentation of human souls and their resources that we quite properly abhor and through a protracted period of collective anxiety that commonly weakens rather than strengthens a nation's character, we have the intellectual, moral, and spiritual resources to guarantee our security in the presence of totalitarian states of great power. It is now entirely clear to us that,

Continued

on p. 32

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, EDUC TION, AND WELFARE • ABRAHAM A. RIBICOFF, Secretary OFFICE OF EDUCATION .. STERLING M. McMURRIN, Commissioner

CARROLL B. Hanson, Director, Publications Services SCHOOL LIFE

School Life reports Office planning copies, 20 cents. Send check or money September 1961 and action and publishes articles by order (no stamps) to the SuperintendVol. 44

No. )

members of Office staff; presents sta ent of Documents, U.S. Government tistical information of national interest; Printing Office, Washington 25, D.C.

reports legislation and Federal activities
THEODORA E. CARLSON
and programs affecting education. Pub-

EDITORIAL BOARD
Editor
lished nine times a year.

John H. LLOYD, Chairman ADA JANE KELLY

Printing approved, Bureau of the Associate Editor

LANE C. Ash ... Paul S. BODENMAN Budget, Aug. 23, 1961. Contents not copyrighted. Subscription: Domestic,

R. ORIN CORNETT ... ARNO JEWETT CATHERINE P. WILLIAMS

$1.75 a year; foreign, $2.25; 1., 2., and EMERY M. FOSTER . ANDREW H. GIBBS Assistant Editor 3-year subscriptions available. Single

CLAYTON D. HUTCHINS

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Surplus property report ment Service), and the Veterans Documents expediting service

Administration (Departments of VetDuring the last quarter of the 1961

Subscribers to the Documents Exerans Benefits and of Medicine and fiscal year (April, May, and June),

pediting Project at the Library of Surgery). Members exchange inthe Department of Health, Education, formation on programs and develop

Congress receive a unique service: and Welfare made $99 million worth ments; carry out interagency agree

They automatically receive nondeof surplus Federal property available

pository U.S. Government publicato the States for educational, public ments, proposing changes when

tions not available for purchase at the health, and civil defense purposes. necessary; stimulate interagency co

Government Printing Office or from operation in studies and research Real property accounted for $14.6

the issuing agency. The project million and personal property for

projects; and consider problems and
ways of solving them, such as estab-

acquires these publications by check$84.5 million.

ing the publications lists of all Federal Under the provisions of the Federal lishing a cooperative training pro

agencies, accessions lists of libraries gram for rehabilitation workers. Property and Administrative Services

Two States—Connecticut and Ar

specializing in public affairs, and adAct of 1949, property the Federal

vance proof sheets of the Monthly kansas—have committees similar to Government no longer needs is dis

Catalog of United States Government tributed to educational, public health, the Interagency Committee on Voca

Publications for desirable nondepositional Rehabilitation. and civil defense agencies of State

tory items. Through agreements with and local governments and to eligible

distributing offices it can often disnonprofit health and educational inThe deaf at college

tribute material before the general stitutions exempt from Federal taxes. Among the films on loan by the distribution date. Regional offices handle transactions. Captioned Films for the Deaf pro Other services of the project include

Property transferred this quarter gram of the Office of Education is one tracking down out-of-print or scarce includes such items as school and which received a nomination for a Government publications at the rehospital building sites; buildings 1960 “Oscar” award in the category quest of a subscriber and distributing suitable for college dormitories or of documentary short subjects from sample issues of new Government faculty housing; hospital, school, and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts serials with order slips. office furniture and supplies; motion and Sciences. Entitled "Beyond Among the publications the project picture projectors; and laboratory Silence," the 15-minute film was made distributes automatically are the reequipment.

on the campus of Gallaudet College ports of the Office of Education's cowith students and faculty members as operative rc3-arch program and new players.

educational media research program Rehabilitation committee

"Beyond Silence" is also available (title VII, National Defense Educa. Representatives of three major without captions for noncommercial tion Act). Federal agencies meet regularly as educational use by purchase from Sponsored by a joint committee of an Interagency Committee on Voca United World Films, Inc., 1445 Park library organizations and administional Rehabilitation to coordinate Avenue, New York 29, N.Y., for tered by the Library of Congress unagency programs: Department of $31.31 a copy.

der contract with the committee, the Health, Education, and Welfare Gallaudet, the world's only college project is self-supporting through (Office of Vocational Rehabilitation), for the deaf, is partly supported by subscription fees. These fees range Department of Labor (U.S. Employ the Department of Health, Education, from $100 to $500 a year, plus a flat ment Service and Veterans Employ and Welfare.

fee of $25 a year for postage. Sub

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