Page Two THE TWIG February 6, 1941 The Twig FdUltW B(>tP«Uv A* OtUUl Organ «/ »* Stmbnl Boiitf o! UttdiOt CM*a» Editorial Staff Raobkl MANEse Editor Loot MoNsslt Associate Editor DotoTBT Rouifo Uanaging Editor Mabt Hcster Powell Managing Editor CoBifBtu HraniNO Managing Editor Madt Lois Ovcrbt Managing Editor Catiigrinb CuiFFEtLK Sports Editor Ltttoji Tinolit Columnist Catbbmnb Wtatt Cartoonlit Business Staff Aonu Graham Business Manager Jacqueune PnE\'08T Asst. BKJiness Manager Vimn Jerr»Bi8 Circulation Manager Ada Wall Mart Qabvkt jAim PARXCR Masib Snoo JKAR BCDDINOnSLD BEVERLT ARH MoRBT Reporters AuoB Falls Cblcstb Haueiok Fto Hewitt VoottOA Obbbnb Sakab Jt)8ticb Ni:a Yelvebtom Utstib Petbbson StTS Rodwell Buzabbtb Rioob Helem Wbitbeead Mart ELizABBrn Fobtdi Bdwina Lawrbnce Amrib Laubis Parker Mabtba Ark Aller Avis Brarcb Typists Maroabr Fowlkb Ruth Obebn Qluabbtb Coleuah Rebecca Beddinofield Doris Jbak Lbabt EntaNd ta MC«Bd*cUM dw(Ur Octobu- tl, tS2t./*t Peat OfBM *t IUI«l(h, N. C.. ond«r Act of UitcB t. II7(. A«MMan«* for mAlKoB ipMUl of PMUn Pro- Tldtd for Id SmUob Ittt. Act of Oetobcr 8, 1»17. au> U>«Im4 Octobar II, IS21. SUBSCUPTION PRICE -«.T0 Where’s Our School Spirit? School spirit? I wish there were an other term for that which most of us don’t seem to have. But there it stands, or rather, doesn’t stand. In all our projects we sit down in the middle. We step aside for others to take the lead—and since we all step aside, we get no where. Why, for example, don’t we already have the logs for the cabin out here? Are we really interested? Yes, but we don’t want to crack the nut. We want the goody. We don’t want to work! And a sad state of affairs this is. And sadder it will be. When we thought that the hut was a thing of the immediate future, we schemed and worked as well as could be expected of us. But now since the cabin seems a little further off, do we hear that buzz of interest? Apparently not. We have not enough forethought, foresight, or what have you, to look forward to the coming day. We want the hut now. We can’t wait. We think only of the present. Well, then, there’s nothing to do ex cept WORK! Share and share alike! It might, you know, be worth the trouble. And it would show some peo ple that we can have “school spirit!” What Are Grades? What do marks mean to you? What does a grade mean to all of us? Are we willing to let our knowledge and our ability to think be measured by such more or less partial figures and letters? Why do we let jealousy of grades wreck not only our friendships but also our very lives? Why? We aim for a high mark, a passing grade, often thrusting aside the pur- po.sc of college life. We don’t bother to make bosom friends, to broaden our views of life, to be able to take an im personal sland on any subject, to be open-minded and unprejudiced, We “spot” teachers, .study, and “push” for grades. All is wrangling. But all this distastefulness could be removed. I’m sure, if a better and more impartial system of grading were in stalled in this college. A system that would enable one to pass or fail—no "in-betweens": a .system that would cla.ssify the marks as very satisfactory, satisfactory and unsatisfactory! And why doesn’t this institution, showing all the promise that it does, aspire to the use of this modern advancement in grading? Why? Takes and Mistakes By LVTTO.N Tl.Vtil.KY +• LOGIC What is a double ptstunla? Well, a petunia Is a flower Uke u begonin', A begoDlu iB a meal like a sausatse; A Bausogo unU battery Is a crime; MoDkeys crime trees; Trees a crowd; A rooster crowed In tlie moroine and made a noise; A Dolse Is on your (ace like your eyes; The eyes Is the opposite ot the oays; A horse nays nnd hne a colt; You got a colt and go to bed and wake up io the mornlrf^ with double petunia. —Johnnie Vlvando's page in The Baptist Student. "So you're a saleBman! What's your line?” "Salt." “I'm a salt seller, too." "Shake." —Bxehange. WARNING! Two white marks Across the bill. Two white marks— And then a split. Two skis Up- Head In the snow, Scramble up nnd off they go. Two red cheeks— They’re riding high. Two more spills. A blackened eye. Two more falls— A broken nose. Two more falls But OD he goes. Two white sheets, And then a head— Those, who ski Will land Id bed. \ They have devised a process ot making wool out of milk whlcb must make the cow feel sort of sheepish. “You should work bard and get ahead." "I've got a bead.” She was only a taxi driver’s daughter but you auto meter. THE PERFECT MAN There 1s .a man who never drinks nor smiles, nor chews nor swears. Who never gambles, never flirts, Who shuns all awful snares- He’s paralyzed. —Afaftamian. Roses are red, Violets arc blue, Dandelions are yellow, Carnations are various other colors. —Alabamian. A young theologian named Fiddle Refused to accept bis degree. For, said he, "Ifs enough to be Fiddle Without being Fiddle, D.D.” —Jester. A freshman informed Dr. Price on a Bible quiz that Jesus was criticized because he as* sociated with “Republicans and sinners”— and that on the eve of election. (By the way, when i* the next election???) To the Frosh— Don’t let sophomores scare you. After all, a sophomore Is only a freshman who has paid tuition twice. —.Var/on College Journal. He called his girl Geometry, she was so plain and solid. —.Uarion College Journal. Fact: The Greeks are some fighters. Comment by Mussolini: “1 came, I saw, I concurred.” —Alabamian. A skeptical man was Bill Treeter Who wouldn't believe his gas meter. He pulled out a match, And gave It a scratch, “Good mornlDg," he suid to St. Peter, —Old Maid Maga:ine. AN ANCIENT DITTY Ever heard it? Well If you haven't, you're going to now: "The horses run iiround, their feet are on tlie ground Oh, who will wind the clock when I’m away? Away? Go got the axe, there's a lly on baby’s chin. A boy's best friend Is his mother. His mother. Looking oui a window, a second story window I slipped nnd spniincd iiiy eyebrow on the imvenicni. The pavement. Feed ibe liuliy garlic, so we'll And him In the dark. A hoy's host friend iB his mother, ills mother. Lookin' ihroiiKh a knot bole. In pappy's wood- on luK. Why ilo they put the shore so near the ocean? Tbo (luciin? Go get the Listerine. Sister wants n beau. A boy’s best trleml Is his mother. Ills mother.” —Curoltnliin. ROMANCE “1 have drawn the curtains close And from my easy chair i Ktri-tcb my band towards you ,lii8t to feci that you tiro there. I vow, us I view you sleeping Life'H comforts shall he your lot For I love you dearly, Flossie, You're the best hound dog I've got.” —Hummer Jammer. TAIiLli TALK— Tb(f technical name for snoring is Khect mu sic, Thcin there's the little duckling who was terribly embarrnssud because his lirst pants were down. Making love In like making pie. All you need is crust and a lot of apple sauce. —Wiird'flelmunl Hyphen. Teacher; Take one out of ten and what do you have. Tommy? Tommy: Pink toothbrush. —Pointer. HAPPY BIRTHDAY! Suzzy Snoop Says... We’ve had visitors in town this past week—came all the way from Syracuse to make a call on a South ern Belle. Alice, you tell them how to do It. Oee! He was cutel But here's a balance in popula tion. Some come and others go. Now “Aggie" and "Eddie" have gone to Davidson to dance with Charlie and Joe to Will Bradley's music. ■ Now when home town folks get together there are good times to be had by all. Haonab Ruth and Christine are really making us be lieve there Is more rhyme than rhythm In that idea. It seems that one of the fellows u$ed a Job as an excuse to b« near Hannah Ruth end the otber thought of school and Christine. Seems to me there is something awfully attractive about Sundays and church at Hayes-Barton. There's something about a beautl* (ul blonde tenor and a rosy-cbeek brunette. But Laurie and Lila Ruth are running the information bureau on that score. Ask them. Do any of you know wby our little transfer. Ruby, likes Boon- Iseley so well, I know that every time I ace her tbere I see a “Dan dy'’ red cub convertible outside. There Is some connection, believe me. Have you heard what the Mere dith girls can do to the Wake For est Kappa Sigs? Quote—Take them or leave them—Unquote. I thought that was all over. Hazel, especially since “Fortune” has been knocking at your door. Flo Hewitt likes literary stuff. That stuff includes the young Washington author and the book he's writing. Wonder how much he tells her about that when they travel back and forth between here and Washington? Who was that pretty blonde with two-inch eyelashes that called on Phillips the other night. That gal got more compliments on him than the new dress she wore. There's one girl In school (hat makes a lasting impression. Ask Mary Lois about the one she made at Carolina and the swell results she’s getting. Gollee! I’d hate to think that every letter I wrote to one "Cer tain some one” had to be censored! Poor Gretchen. She has to put up with that as well as all the jokes and stories about the. life ot a sailor. Hear that there are a couple of sponsors for Wake Forest Mid winters In our midst. Jane Allen for Jim Early and Evelyn White for Paul Bullock. Speaking of Evelyn, have you heard about the awful time she’s having keeping her men straight. Well, It seems that Paul has been pretty hard hit by the compelltlon he has been get ting lately. Whan you get down to the "L’s" In the alphabet you get down to the girls who get more telephone calls than a bird has feathers. Lena nnd Leette ai-e the ones we have on mind, I think It's State and Carolina that do most of the calling. Suzanne likes uniforms and music as well as the rest of us— or maybe better. Hers is more specillc—and settles down on the Hickory hand whose music and uniforms make her heart beat faster. Summer school romances don't fade as quickly as you are often inclined to think. 'Bob has re turned to Betty from Annapolis. Thnt romance Is in full bloom with no possible chnnce of fading be cause it’s held together with a pin. 1 hear Tuck is sick. Nancy, did the m;in in chapel scare you when he began to talk about sick people liplng dangerous and scoundrels? Well, I suppose no more news Is good news to you girls who arc holding your breath for fear that I might tell on you. But there’s always another edition of Tiiu Twio and with it comes more gossip, Until (hen 1 remain your Little SUZZY, AMERICA’S CRIME PROBLEM lly Dh. AI.ICK B.^n.swKi.1, KK"rii Probably next to the question o( how to Hvold paying an Income (ax, America’s greatest peace-time worry Is the prevention of crime. Aside from the worry thei'o seems (0 be no close analogy in the two problems. The payment of the tax Is personal, hut tho prevention of crime Is dissociated from the aver age person's feeling. He rosts in Ihe assurance that he Is neither u criminal nor responsible for the control or the prevention of crime. There is no quarrel over the seri ousness of the question; no denial sa By CATHEBtKB WtAT'T 1941 1891 that the United States pays an an nual crime bill of around tl5,000,- 000,000, and no gainsaying the as sertion that immediate action Is necessary to control the monster. The devotees, ot ego-centric'Amerl- canism may be embarrassed by the discovery that the number ot people killed in the United States Is greater than that of any other country; that robberies are given an even greater proportion than the murders. Yet the complacency ot many Americans is unshaken by such (acts. They dissociate them selves and tbelr companions from responsibility; explain the un favorable statistics by laying the crimes to the larger number of Negroes and immigrants in Amer ica, and offer as a solution more legislation to prevent crime. Public-minded citizens may rea son that this is a problem for tbe specialists—the biologists, the psy choanalysts, tbe psychiatrists, the sociologists, etc.; that crime is something more than an incidental result ot the behavior of the social group. The services ot these work ers is Immeasurable in value, but many of them will agree that some criminals are made, not, born, and that the coodltions of life around the offenders have encouraged their misconduct. The layman cannot escape his share of respon sibility for these conditions. Estimates of the crimes com mitted In the United States by peoples of different races and dif ferent nationalities as compared with those by native-born whites will not explain the high ratio In America. In certain classes of crime, Negroes and immigrants ap pear to lead, but in other types native whites are far in advance. Undoubtedly, important factors in making American crimes In clude freedom from regimentation ot American life as shown In the absence of strict public discipline, (he standard for social eminence, the existence of out-moded enforce ment machinery, and tbe irrespon sibility ot American citizens. The layman may logically reason thnt the absence of strict regi mentation ot American life by pub lic agents, police, etc., will explain the high percentage of American crimes; that if officers of the law appeared constantly among Ameri can citizens, misdeeds might be prevented. However, lovers of the Informality of American life may count such a price for sobriety nnd order too great. They may argue (hat any mother may keep her son from getting Into trouble by keep ing him Indoors, but thnt she can not keep him continuously indoors without his loss of freedom ot mind nnd spirit and robustness of body. It seems quite probable that the standard of American social stand ing mny be i contributing force to American misbehavior. Any coun try which has an aristocracy based on material wealth offers greater temptation to men to kill, rob, nnd steal because by so doing they may gain control of those properties which are identified with social standing. When the law enforce ment machinery is inadequate tor the apprehension oC the offenders and when social consciousness is apathetic In its opposition to the offense, the criminal may not only escape tbe tolls of the law, but may return to a commanding i)osltlon In the society which he has out- wltte^l. Countries which have an aristocracy based upon birth or upon Intellectuality do not offer such Incentives. Students of American govern ment have long recognized the in effectiveness ot our law enforcing machinery. When our ancestors came to this country they wore seeking (o escai>e from the rigid control ot the Stuart monarchy. Their unhappy oxperlonces under that centralized authority led them to place the task of law enforce ment In the hands .of local offi cials. Then the colonies were changed into states, county sheriffs and local policemen continued Ilo SCHOOL VACATIONS By the American Youth Commission The commission, ot which Owen D. Young is chairman and Floyd W. Reeves is director', has been studying school vaca|loos, among other youth problems, for the last five years. This September the commission's representatives asked that'summer- vacation question ot a selected group of young people ranging from fourteen to nineteen years old. They had been attending the three junior work camps estab lished by the Associated Junior Work Camps, and had a brand new idea ot wliat a summer vacation could be like. They had spent two straight months of their vacation at work—and I mean work, sis to eight hours .a day of good stiff grind. And all but eight of the fifty-eight ot them had never be fore In their lives done a tap more serious than occasional household errands. They all said they had a "swell time,” and meant it. If you think they were fooling, let me tell you these people not only didn’t get a cent for their work, but paid (126 apiece tor the privilege of doing It, They hadn't merely enjoyed an active healthful vacation in the open air, tree from boredom and full of novelty. They had been taking a valuable course In sociology first-hand. They had learned something ot how “the other half" lives and works. They had rubbed elbows with poverty for the first time. They had seen something ot various fields of work, and tried them out themselves. In some Instances they had begun to get an inkling for the first time ot what kind of work they might serve as enforcement officers of the state laws as well as of local ordinances. Consequently we have a system though originated when transportation was by ox carts and horseback yet continuing when the automobiles and the airplanes have almost annihilated distance. When the criminal makes his escape in these modern conveyances the local officer, limited to county lines, Is certain to be out-distanced before he can overtake tbe culprit. And little is being done to assist the officer. The incredibly small coun ties ot the eastern coastal areas bear testimony to the failure of citizens to enlarge boundary lines which would at least give the en forcement officer a more even chance In his race to capture the criminal and at the same time re duce tbe expenses occasioned by the existence of numerous unneces sary local governments. Politicians argue that these local units keep government In the hands of the people. This Is true only so long as the local units serve the needs of the people. Tho Increasing num ber of federal and state officials Is an index to the failures oC the local agencies. When local communities tall to control tlieir own lives the door Is opened tor the entrance of a centralized authority, which the American pioneers had sought to escape. Tho mulntonance of the ideals of tbe founders of tho Amerlcim republic Is the responsibility of the citizens ot the republic. They are responsible tor' sentiments which prohibit or encourage crime. The hoy or girl who broke u speed law or out-witted u “cop" and was nllowed to boast about it; tho rich niuu who.stole large sums and es- capud unpunished to return to domlnnte the society which ho had defrauded; the victims of poverty who were denied the necessities of life; the crushed spirits who found no aid for a bettor life are tesli- monies of the failures of "good'’ ultlzens to prevent America's greul crime problem. want to pick permanently tor them selves. One ot these camps was at Pine Mountain Settlement School in the Eastern Kentucky mountains, among a fringe ot tbe western “Bloody Harlan County” residents. These people are ^parated from the outside world by unbroken ridges. Here high schools hoys and girls at the work camp can study rural slums, with their housing and other problems. Pine Mountain Settlement School Is a vocational high school for the youth o( the region. As It depends on private funds, donated labor is boon. Thirty per cent of the pu pils remain at the school part ot the summer to "work out" tuition costs. This is one reason why the school is an ideal place for a work camp. It gives two widely differ ent high school groups a chance to swap experiences and ideas. The second work camp was nt Andover, K. J., where the Hudson Guild Neighborhood House runs a farm as a recreational ground tor under-privileged children, young workers and needy families with children. Many improvements were needed at the farm, and provided: plenty ot Jobs for the paying work: campers. The setting gave tfaem^ contact with agricultural llte and pursuits. And it is near enough tO' Industrial areas to make explora tory trips possible. Camp Stepney, the third work camp, was on a ramshackle farmr In the Northern Connecticut hills, taking New York slum children for summer vacations. Here was pinety of repair and construction work for the work campers, along with a taste ot rural life. And again a variety ot industries lie within easy roach for day trips. The chances tor constructive work at these camps stir the young people's imagination. The work camp promoters do not claim a definite plan for vocational guidance or training. But the scheme does give the campers a chance to explore the work field in a variety of fundamental working skills. Carpentry, plastering, con crete work, masonry and farming were all sampled by each boy and girl In these work camps this- last summer. It seemed to give them all a now sense of being' worth something In the world as they worked to help others less lucky than themselves. The camps were In a measure self-governing. Camp Steyney In Connecticut was most successful at it. The members called a “good and weltai-e nieotlng" to establish simple regulations for the camp's operation. They divided the sum mer’s program into five sections— for social affairs, athletics, field trips, log and executive responsi bilities—and elected committees to plan the nctlvHies of each. An executive committee was made up of the chairmen of the other com mittees. serving with the staff as uu advisory council. At all three camps tho summer workers got some experience In the working of democratic govern ment and In organizing social ac tivities. In nil these various ways, real social problems, real work and real living are mado the major elements ot the work camps. At Pine Mountain the young camp workers found violations of the rights of free speech and assembly and interference with labor’s right to organize. They found hillside land that would produce tor only three years before the soil was wuslioil away. They learned from actual clinic work that many of the diseases harassing the moun tain people could be prevented by propur diet and other simple neces sities that these people did not have. They found that only one of evei-y ten children there ever finished the eighth school grade. From tho New Jersey camp, field trips were made to the world- —Continued on page 8.