Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Jan. 2, 1943, edition 1 / Page 2
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I tt The Mid- con* ten. iHtitttiiilkm. D. a ^ 'IbtyB. 8i«M 1 i«t fOV«f«MlBI r Nigtf wmt k^pitg to tWiiag M«iMi»as hr kdkm ot «it to tte Nation** «apiui. ftnr fBkii TO" diooCBi ’ «t««d-bre»kiiif eei^oa* M9t it i* in one of Wuhinnfion ’a reiidei^iiU tmatimB at •ad U Streets, K. W. by the BviwM Homes , CmrpDrstioB aad naned tor the Veffro dtsa of vmioi at Anpard 0iiiT«nitj, Ule Lncy 1>. tJBmUkmet 'Ball okers uid eomfortAle aceoroc- to 322 Negro women. WilUa im dagrt of its openiag im,I>eeember 5, mor« thaa two aeon trar workarB had already takoi ap residenee there and ■ man wen moving in dalljr. Onapancy of die 290 ontside TOQttMf 22 of vhieh are doable, is aoaiiatfd to Nefro women war •Aezs who hare eou« to Wash igtm aiaee Jaly 1,^941. Eaeii MMxia eompktely faraished ■4'aMid aerviee is provided HW .a w«e&. laeloded in the rates of $7.00 for a single room a»d 4»aUe room are maay facilities fiw war worke» and their gnests. Th^ inelade a tullj-- afaipped recreation room, a ^acioas ^ a comfortable Hi» iHtaier taoIoM» flC ti» m S. litii at Haikqpe, AUh iwb «iB iirve as mma^ « direetor of ScDroit Bill» a iWld«ao« Mildfa^ for mde irar mw Mier aaostroetiok ia asiiie eeigMwrilood. Whea aqa^ilflia «arly ia 1943, this new tfaiilar la dcsigu as# ififatatmenti^ will aeeoaimoa ata Mi awn. CmStruetion costs a«4 cfiytneat wffl exceed $500,- Aa Maaiging director ^o? the tara paaiaats, Ma. BaiAs «iU aapavise a atafl of aiqproxi]llstc> ly 60 employaes. Administra- tire staff membws of the Luey D. Slowe Residence Hall includ- M Miss Nettie M, Brooker, reai* dent maaago*; Mrs. E/V. Johns, Mrs. E. V. krOy f assistant resident manager; Miss Mary H. Dowling, finance offic er; W^katon Langoi^, Bianflger; Miss Ernestine M. Dupuy, secretary; Henry Sparks, eashicr; Mis* Bculali Burke, hpnsekecper; Mrs. Marie Witaoa, assi^stant housekeeper; Mrs. Manie V. Stokes cafeteria manager; Daniel W. Miles, Ka’*! Benjamin, ftaae Johnsem aiid William Thomas, engineen ' aud Eagcne Roberson, storekeeper,^ \ The Lacy D. Sfowe Besideoa^'. Hall is one of a number of horn* es for war worked bnilt recently by the Defense Homes Corporaj tion in Warfiington, D. C.; Portsmoath, N. H.; Niagara, 'IT; ChaHfitbn, S. C.; Newporit News^ Portsipouth and 'Kadfor*^, Va.; Jacksonville, Ha.; Shef field and Mob,ile Ala.; Bouldw, Nev.; Joilet HI.; Massillon an«i Columbus, 0.; Bremerton, W.-'sh. , sore-hoar snaekij'i and a cafeteria wAi^ will' soon f^ish a, yell ilalaaced soomishing ’'meal at . iwniiaal ^ats. & addition, the three story laridc liailding has tasemeM (taindiy faiulit^ with ijponiiy xa^piBS on caiek' lliMtr aiai^a^valft Aop apd beaafy ^Mlon for the director •# the Lacy Sidesee Ball is W. •m Camporee, one fally of Badge show, at leaat 37 per cent: g plamlMr diaiss a mistake of all Scoots in Lot^ferm Camp, all Trodps spend at leaat ten days and nights eampiag. Health and Safety — Physical anniinstion. for each new Seoat all Seoats have eomplete physical , examination during the jwa?,' iril troop meeting places and cump sites inspected, Finanee opwate on plan, and for the loeal Com mittee to perfect ways aoJ means of ffhanciftg awards fib’* district contests. he eharg# firice In it a latjir Otokss a ihistaks ife is Just whi^ iM waated; he can haya a ohaoce to try the ease ail over again. When a carpenter makes a mis take it is ao more than be cs- pflctcd. fWhen a doctor’makes a mtstaJce To have each Troop J*® merely buries it. the Troop Budget When a judge makes a mH'ake it becomes the law of the 'ond When a preacher makes a mis- talw aolR^ knowr tin ditfer- encc Bat irhaii 1 mmm sm rotmmm Wh«t make* life worth the living^ Is our givinf an# Ki^iviag; Oive tiay bit* of liailnflM That «ill leave ttehM^ius^ And foigiviflg biHer trifles That the r^ht word of^ itr'>« For the little things are Mnirr Than we often gUnp to f^m What nwket, lifia wortii ^e the liidnf ffs our giving and foigiVing* —Thomst Grant Spris^er. WAAC8~PgPA»rW»FitOiH>B»MOfHB8' TawUag s»e« coaipany recocda with la^t mtaute fai- atractiona la Third Officer Natalia Donaldson, Des Moines, commander of a company of the Women’s Army Auailfciry Corps leaving the First WAAC Training Gamp at Fort Dea Molnea, la;, for Ft. Hoachuca, Arts. Officer Donaldson is at the axtreme right and with her is an officer of her company, Third Officer Carrie Sherard, Atlanta, Qa. Receiving the records it Third Officer Myrtle Anderson, Boston, commander of a company taking over the quarters. At Officer Anderson’s left are Third Ot- ficara Geneva FWiruson, Cincinnati, and Vera G- Campbell, New York City., fcbby, a fouitaia mxm log -ffi-^a-i NaghYill**. Never kiss a private on the btreef Tenn.; and Orange Christi, Texas. and Coi-pns * • * MAKEl EVERY BOND BAY I Kmnm-ttimmmKAmf PROPERTY MAKi^iHENT fl«SURAIfC£ OP ALL mraK If'^oa have houses or tfattmeats tor snnt oT' WBm If yoo i [tore iMriuice os* lildvice I viKllBUSOOOw Mm faMsnsM & ti4 Fagrettetille SCreeit NEVER KISS A mjm JDST FOR ■ - .M ■ .. BY JACK WABDLAW N^ver kiss a,soldrer just for fua Make him \ wait until the war i« jWon Tell him you’ll be true ^ And he’ll come back to you / IM patMB Hw of wm are a^g 9tt 4» Mi imm fmm V&u itim Mr Wmm are etnmmi fhaie ar« p«tfwicf> wiD. be iv^reciatetf. tfmi Mur aittiaa aftrliTfpaar is d^nam to Msrre jwc wnii,.||^te m tir't* fir'Mf ^ large 12'* There might be qthers you would like to meet j Why not wait-and go To the USOf Never kiss . a private on the street.-' , ' ■* Never kiss a,corporal you’ve just met ! irtake him think jou are hard to got ‘Til you’ve known him a week Run, play hide and seek Never kiss a corporal you’ve just met. Never kiss a' sergeant o»V5arad«! TH#ngS like that are best %^»en they’re delayed Jua^t give him a smile (Aod he will walk a mile pNcver kiss a sergeant on parade. Nflvec kiss lieutenants on vhe lose If you do, one sure will cook your goose Lieatenants like to play Then they will go away Never kiss lieutenants on the loose. Never kiss a captain ip his tent He might think things that you never meant Though he seems all riglit (Siop, tuen on the light Never kiss! a captain in- his tent. Never kiss a .major in the dark lEvan though* it may be -just .i lark When he says “Lets be friends” ‘That’s where the story eilds INever kiss a major in the dark. jNever kiss tf colonel in a tank iThongh yOn Ve ' infafuateS with i his rartk • ’ He can make it go Either fast or slow Never kiss a colonel in a tank. Never kiss a general in a jeeo He might shift his gears and* make it leap , Tho’ some are old and gray. They still make folks obey ifeTtrr kiss a i^awai ift a’ jeep/^" If you must kiss the Army do it now Don’t forget the Navy, they know how Let your big love scenes Include the Air Corps and .lum luvo For there’s no tax on kisses, anyhow. Copjrright applied for 1942 By JACK WARLAW Raleigh Bldg., Raleigh, N- C. Regi^ratwn 2nd Quarter Increased At N, C, College By EBIO E. L. HEBOtTLES A definite indi average Negro DURHAM — cation of the youth’s willingness to avail him self of'the many educational oi»- portunities afforded’ in the Tar heel State is evidenced by thj marked Increase in the enroll ment of studj^nts at the Nort.i Carolina College for Negroes for the sieeond quarter of the aeade- juic year. The large number of matriculants which is in e\cet. of previous years could be attri buted to a desire on the part of all Negroes young and old alike, to become well prepared in «>mi .specific field of endeovor to as- jsist in the preservation of this jgreat Democracyi' Dr. James E. Shepard, President of the instit'i tion said that “the many enro)e»-s nre distributed in. the vaj*ious divisions including the Law S^ool, the School of Library Science, College of Liberal Arts land Scienec, the Graduate School and the Departments o& PubHc Health and Bnsiness Ad- iminstration. ” Various d'lfense courges, are now,_ b^ng offert'd and conducted jwimarily for Boy Scout’s Council Hdd loprtant Meet In Month Of Dec. DIJEHAM ^ Meeting of the- N^ro District Committee* of the Ooconeechee Council, Boy Sconts of- Ameriea, held at Lyon Park School December 15, 1942, William D. King, Field Scout Executive out lined the following objectives fo- 19^-- Training - Fundamentals of the, Boy Scout Movent, S«out- masters’ Training course, and emei^ency service training course for 1943. It will be very necessary in view of the drive ) for New Troops, that more men be train ed both as Committeemen aiul Scoutmasters. The National Emergency makes tjie Emergency Service Training for both men and boys almost mandatory. * Aflvancement - Monthly Board of n;^view and Court of Honor should be held, and an effori made to have one third of all Scouts in the tenderfoot rank only, to recruit a full Merit Badge Faculty, and to encourage Scouts to earn Merit Badges ii; personal and public health. Camping and Activities — One Central Long-Term Camp during the year with 75 per cent of all Troops taking part, one Please turn to Page Eight those persons who are engaged in some form of day-tme' occuoa- tion. Those deiense courses are taught at night under the direc tion of well qualified instructors and tKe 'entire pro^ain is de signed to prepare students for participation in a material w»y in the'Tlov'arnment’s war ei’ort. The North Carolina College for Negroes which was recently placed on the approved list of the Association of American Universities and College is the fourth N^o iastitafjdn'in this ooun^ to receive such an honor a£l3ZiB now ^ £h»>aieeea-for- the training of Negro^Tn the South. (Gloria in Exc»tsh, Deo/ St. GmMs of iheM Mu# MlMHlv ClulsiiiiM ouvto. la tfie chapel, under the dlrebtton of Bfv. Bdwtn tlili bowniiiig W all o£ whom are tefe^ el^r afri- ^ wWtPiy tntfnliif, an iiow^mite^ «*' •k Remember 1933 — when tiraa* wtme Maybe you didn’t have a job. Maybe yoa amA yotf wile and^kMi-dUtaPt eat tooweO—-dKM toowiA’^-liaw too maehfiai. dwn dial if things were ever different, yon’d make np‘ for it. Chances are, today, things qre.iifffmat. ^Bwi’ve got ■ jA* To**r« gettinf good money. And yon*d natur^y like io have a litde fun with it, YonM likiS io stttte ^Se **eifras^ ftid yw and* your ^mfly nev«r had dorii^ ih^ hard times. 11*8 only human to feel that way. Itot r^jht now — weVe got to ^t being so human! Rif^t now, over in England, a btmeb of leDows we' jgetlkig r«i^ to taekle one of the bloodiest jobs ever given an Army. & -the Pacific^ another bunch is playing hide-and*seek with an enony that thinks the right treat* meat for a wounded prisoner ia a baiytmet Arou|^ the girta. Others are •Wealing in Afriea—still others are on eold^ dreary, fog*bonnd islands near the Bering Sea. i , i' 1 ■' T^tV their job. ^ ^ ‘ - But it’s our Job to give ti^n the tools diey naed to win ^ brbnyS^Wmr Bonifii! And sa far, tve areH^t doing our /mB /a^l R^t now, diere are still peo^fe who oi^flMi to be buyin0 Wai through the Payroll Savings Ptei —- But arei^f. Whii^ plenty of people in the Plan are fini esllii^ more than die 10% Uncle Sam needs, a lot m*e pnttt^ asMb kes# Aan diey can. The iellows who aren’t yet in the Plm or, being, fai, havaa’t yet hit dieir 10% — aren’t unpatriotic, or 5th Colnmniato, or anj^Ung like that. They’re ^ just human. TTiey just haven’t rediaed thefr C^owntry’s bitter, crying need — now! They haven’t rcalbed that Americans have been ItdMd in battle for lack of planes, ships, tanks and bullets — toob that the BCbiiey we’d like to spend for fun has got to buy! Unde Sam hopM that every sin|d« ®f "• realiae it'^ l^ January 1st, 1943. By tfite date, everybody on a payroll should be m a Pi^oU Savings Plan — and we’B ‘*Top That 10% by New Yemf’s.” So, if yon aren’t setting aside your 10%, go m in mid t^ ’em yHi wairt to raise your sights. Not to 6%, or 7% or 8% — buf at leiAt 10^ K yon ean put in more than 10% — do it. H yon aren’t yet in on the PnQfrott Savings Plan algn up tomorrow! WHAT you SHOUU3 DOt Pyaw-ara:; iavestiiv 10% of yonr pay is War Bond* Payroll SaTinca Flan ^— booai dut 10% if yoa ean. Working in a plant wkere the Plan is imtalfed, bat havao’t signed vp yet — si(n up tomorrow. Wodkiaf in a plant wliere the Tajmdl Saving* Maa Iwni’f fcsaii installed, talk to joar union liead, forenuin, or plant maaagm* — aa4 •ee if it can’t lie installed r^ht away. Tlw loeal bank will ka i^ad to belp. , IJnaUe to get ia on Ae %n4nga Pbi^ for utr ge M 'X. yomf loeal bank, or wtttrercr Btmda im sdMt lllay will Ba ifati^ la belp y«i start a P6ai of yeeremfe 1. t. • ' , •' •, -LA' ■ - ' ■ ,1:1.■ * ; ' j ■>./■*, V '• -A ■' Blit II.S. WAi i#ms , THROIfOH THE PAYROLL SAVINOS PLAN
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 2, 1943, edition 1
2
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