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Page 23 text:
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There are good reasons for this. In the first place, T. M. I. is a school of Well-defined policies and traditions developed through the continuous super- vision of the same administrative officers. It is known to be a school of excel- lent government and orderliness. Quite naturally, such a school makes its appeal to parents of similar ideals and to homes where orderliness, regard for parental wishes, and respect for parental authority prevail. As a rule, such homes are homes of culture and refinement. Boys with such family back- ground are better material for a school to work on, and from them there em- anate better influences on their associates in the intimate life of the boarding school. An unusually high per cent of our boys come from these better homes and display evidences of better home training. It is a fact well known throughout the area served by the school that un- seemly conduct will not be tolerated, and for this reason boys of the more rowdy sort simply do not seek admission here. Our boys are live, healthy, red-blooded young fellows, but not of the sort that think wild parties and ob- jectionable conduct essential to a good time. The new cadet entering the school comes in contact with old boys already proud of its fine traditions and loyal to its higher interests. This appeals to his better impulses and arouses or confirms in him a purpose to make for himself a good student record in the school and school community. This sort of process has gone on through the years and still continues in T. M. I. It has become a mighty power for good infiuences in the life of the school as a whole and in the individual lives of boys enrolled. MORAL AND RELIGIOUS INFLUENCES While Tennessee Military Institute is not a church school in the sense that it is supported by funds from any particular denomination, the importance of religion in the life of the individual and the claims of the churches on the trained leadership developed in the schools are held before our cadets con- stantly. Hence, it is our constant effort to create in the school a wholesome and vital religious atmosphere-an atmosphere that will inspire and elevate the life and purposes of our cadets as distinguished from the thin veneer of professional religion and pretense which disgust boys with things religious. DAILY CHAPEL We consider our daily chapel exercises conducted by members EXERCISES of the Faculty and visiting speakers a very important part of our daily schedule. True enough that the boys learn by heart some of the standing and oft-repeated messages of some of the officers of the school, but some of those learned-by-heart messages will be recalled months or years afterwards and guide the life of some boy during a moral storm period. Therefore. our day's work will continue to be started with a few minutes reminder of Whose we are and Whom we serve. CHURCH Attendance at Sunday morning church services is reouuired of ATTENDANCE all cadets. Sweetwater is fortunate in its church situation. It is a churchgoing town and the congregations are larger than will be found in most towns of similar size. Sweetwater has been a , Page Nineteen
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Page 22 text:
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x i 4 i , A , 9 , 3 .. A A ,,:-uf: 1f,,,mN.U K .L ,Z i ,vw , A V. XY f 4.4. if 7 ,, l 1 K -,T-ww r f-A -x Qs, W ,WLL 2 kg i , Q V Q jfs: I This room is the center ot the school lite and influence. Chapel exercises are held here each rnorning, and lectures by visiting speakers. GG lf , fi? l 21 W up K tkiik VV i t Kk r. E . THE BATTALION ASSEMBLED AFTER SUNDAY SCHOOL FOR CHURCH All cadets are required to attend the Sunday- morning church services. Page Eighteen Y
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Page 24 text:
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school town for more than sixty years and pastors and people show a very de- sirable interest in the church life of our cadets. We do not have a Catholic Church in Sweetwater. To provide for Cath- olic boys a school-owned bus leaves the school just after breakfast hour on Sunday morning and conveys the Catholic boys to Knoxville in time for ten o'clock Mass. They then return in time for their noon meal at the school. We have been using this plan since 1936 and all of our Catholic patrons are quite well pleased with it. THREEFOLD GROWTH STIMULATED Nine mature men out of every ten realize that they are now what they had begun in a very definite way to be when they were nineteen years of age. There is a very small minority into whose lives some great change has come at a later period by which the present character is distinctly separated from that of the boy, but this is the exception and not the rule. Believing that a boy in his teens is getting the physical growth which determines his later physical fitness for whatever demands may be made on him, that he is getting the mental training which will later determine his preparedness or unpreparedness for his lifework, that he is getting the moral and spiritual development which will determine what his character will be, we undertake in a positive and definite way to stimulate development along these three fundamental lines throughout a boy's attendance in T. M. I. PHYSICAL On his arrival, each cadet is given a careful examination by GROWTH the school physician and an accurate record is made of his STIMULATED condition. Where no marked variation is found from the nor- mal for boys of his age, the regular drills and calisthenics un- der our military instructors, coupled with the various lines of athletics, are considered sufficient. Regular hours and systematic exercises and the mil- itary requirement of erect carriage will guarantee the proper growth where the boy is already normal. Where subnormal development of any of the parts of the body or weakness of any of the vital organs is found, proper exercise will be recommended and required for the correction of the defect. SUPERIOR Since it is the work of every school to try to cultivate men- INTELLECTUAL tal development, no single school may claim patent rights TRAINING on all the excellencies of method. This we do not do. It is a fact, however, that there is a wide difference between the re- sults sought and the methods used in the schools of the country. Tennessee Military Institute excels most of the schools of its type in its insistence on high academic standards and its provisions by which cadets are enabled to measure up to these higher requirements. The first, and perhaps the most important, of these provisions for the pupils' benefit is the high degree of ef- ficiency and capability of the teaching staff. Every teacher in the Faculty has been thoroughly trained for the particular line of work which he is teach- Page Twenty
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