IS-GIVEN HONOR HIGH HONORS AT ESTABLISH BOARD C.ONDUCTING HUNT PRESS MEETINfl Petition Will--s;-Presented to

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1 ance asses has a Baver Wnfeld, l be tred wth the permanent ~E" am~ N" " f.- :\. Dont ;Fo~get! Tomorrow s Js![otJters Day Y 9U Kn!)w Vol. XV. No. 29 Pu~lshed Weekly by the Students of. Wake Forest College WAKE FOREST, N C., SATURDAY, MAY 2, 934 Dont Waste The Mdnght Ol Exams One Week Away Ten Cents Per Copy Vews J PROFESSOR KNG FORESTERS GVEN PUBLCATONS TO DETECTVES TLL and S-GVEN HONOR HGH HONORS AT ESTABLSH BOARD C.ONDUCTNG HUNT PRESS MEETNfl Petton Wll--s;-Presented to ll Faculty Executve Commttee n ~ f Jf.lr. ntervews was Recently Chosen As Member ~ c-- By HOKE NO:BRS ~ ~ G. G. Grubb, a graduate student n Englsh here ths year, dd not attend a formal school untl he was ffteen; he went through hgh school n three years; he served through the war n the navy; he went through college n three years; n the meantme he has taught, marred, preached, and. wrt ten, supportng hmself snce he :frst entered school. of Amercan Socety of aacterologsts. NOTFCATON COMES AS SURPRSE TO DR. KNG --- Old Gold and Black Voted Best n ts Class; Howler Also wns Prze Has Been Member of the Wake GREENWOOD S. CHO$EN Forest Faculty Snce 927 AS VGE PRESDENT s Well Lked At ts Next Meetng SCHABLE AND STEVENS ORGNATORS OF PLAN All Students Desrng Offce On Publcatons Must Have Names Submtted to Board for ts _ Rev. J. F. Fletcher Speaks To Approval Dr. Edward S. Kng, Professor of Members of Assocaton On Armaments; Conventon Lasts From A petton for the establshment of Bacterology and Bo-Chemstry n the ~d ths year he s gettng ~s Wake Forest Medcal School, baa rel Thursday Afternoon to Saturday a publcaton board wll be presented masters degree here has carred throughout the sesson 33 hours cently been honored by electon to ol Mornng to the faculty executve commttee for work, besdes hs dutes as a pastor, actve membershp of the Amercan --- ts approval at ts next meetng. As and bas made straght As snce he Socety of Bacterologsts. B r ngm g ba c k tw o awards and an far as s known ths commttee favors came here last fall. Comng as a surprse to young Dr. offce, the Wa~e Forest delegaton to the creaton of a publcaton board. Grubb s a real worker. t all be- Kng was hs notfcaton, n the form the spr~ng conventon of the North The need for a publcaton board gan, he says, when he was a chld. of a letter f~om James M. Sherman of Carolna Collegate Press Assocaton has long been felt here, but acton as FQ~D pvdq~jh AN.lAC stll Hs father, n hs be chldren explaned, a feelng tred of to n n Cornell Unversty, secretary of the soh em t o ma k e Cety. The Presdent s Dr. Mlton J. at Caro.lfna Pnes, Ralegh, last Satur taken untl ths year. The campus Next year, as ~ed feature, THE a lttle more than :; year a,go. returned from conventon headquarters to the estabshment of one was not dependence, enc()uragng t ther own money and work out ther Rosenau, whose textbook on Prevenown destnes. tve Medcne and Hygene s used Tom Greenwood, retrng edtor of j~rsdcton of ths board wll be the brng to the students of Wake Forest son drawn. from facts and theo.res day mornng. publcatons that wll come under the OLD GoLD AND BLACK wll each week Ths would seem to be the conclu- Hs schoolng started when hs fa here; Dr. Rosenau s connected wth the Wake Forest Stuaent and edtor Stuclent, the HowZer, and the OLD ther was e. teacher, contnued under of OLD. GoLD AND BLACK, was elected College the Collegate Dgest, a roto brought to lght as the nvestgaton a tutor untl he was, and from then the M~dcal School of Harvard Unversty. The vce presdent of the for next year. Cups were won by the The board wll consst of fourteen the presentaton of college news n pc- campus and college buldngs contnue GOLD AND BLACK. frst vce presdent of the assocaton gravure magazne secton devoted to by the pyromanac contnues and the untl be was 6 he dd hs studyng.ndependently. He was admtted nto socety s Dr. Earl F. Meyer of the 933 Howler and ths years OLD GoLD members. The pames of those who ture!l, accordng to a decson t;nade ths to swarm wth armed nghtwatchmen. hgh school on the bass of an exam Unversty of Calforna. AND BL,\c:s:. A. v. Washburn, now stuated n Nashvlle, Tenn., wth the t s passed by the faculty executve would be next to mpossble for the wll be on ths board next year f week between the publshers and the The consensus of opnon s tha~ t naton, and went through n three The socety meets yell\rly at the year~;~ wthout attendng summer Southern Baptst Sunday School Board, edtor and busness manager of the medcal spho.ol w~ch bas done the commttee follows: Thompson Green pyro-denlzen to start another fre successfully. school. He was ordaned to preach n was edtor, and Bll Babcock, of Tarboro, was busness manager of the BLAcK; Waldo Cheek, busness man The Dgest, prnted under the aus wood, edtor of the OLD Gow local publcaton..and 97.. most recognzed work and has ac- After hgh school, Grubbs. servce complshed the greatest advances n wnnng annual. Ow GOLD AN~ BLACK ager of the Ow Gow AND BLACK; pces of the Natonal Scholastc Press n the war began. He enlsted n the the feld of Bacterology. The meetng was edted by C. E. Schable and managed by J~rry Hamer. Frank Norrs, edtor of the Stuttent; :navy, and served frst as an execu- place for ths year has not yet been Assocaton, s dstrbuted weekly by E. D. Meares, busness manager of tve offcers yeoman, or prvate secre determned, but Dr. Kng stated hs n- Larry A. Martn of State was elected papers of colleges and unverstes lo the Student; Howard Rollns, edtor ~ tary, then as lbraran n a supply presdent. Other offcers are: Kath cated throughout the country. There of the HowZer; Earl Forbes, busness shps lbrary contanng 9,000 vol tentons of attendng t f tme and erne Hnes, of E. C. T. C., secretary, manager of the HowZer; Professor J. umes. place permtted. and Monk Lvengood, of Duke, Rce Qusenberry, faculty advser of Hs only wound was n the band. Dr. Kng receved hs B.A. n Medcne from Wake Forest n 925 and The resolutons commttee presented Jones, faculty advser of the Student; treasurer. the ; Dr. H. B. He suffered t, he sad, n the exploson of a depth bomb, whch dsabled served hs nterneahp at the James a plan for placng the rates on adver- Dr. A. C. Reed, f~culty advser of the hm for 0 days and the shp ndefntely. Usng n college ney;apaper on a def- Howler; Herman Stevens, presdent Walker Hosptal n Wlmngton, North nte scale, so that there would be no He remaned n the servce untl Carolna. Upon completon of hs contlct among the news weekles. The of the student body; E. B. Earnshaw, bursar; Professor J. L. Memory, head 92, salng on varous. vessels. He work n the hosptal, Dr. Kng entered commttee was authorzed to work on of the News Bureau, and two reprethe plan and P:e!lent a report at the crused for a tme n north Afrcan Jefferson Medcal College n Phladelpha, where he graduated n 927. fall conventon. Hoke Norrs, of Wake sentatves from the junor and senor waters, n the regon of the Suez.> Canal. He vsted Egypt, and went up Forest, s charman of the. commttee, classes. He was then graduate nterne at and other members are: Katherne Ths board wll have, as -super the Nle Rver to Luxor, where n the Valley of the Tombs of the Kngs le the embalmed bodes of ancent Egyp- l tan rulers. He saw the aged temples at Karnak, and.went through the great museum n Caro. Hs stay n Egypt served as the bass,of a novel he has snce wrtten, "The Vengence of a Nubst," whch, he s gong to prepare for publcaton as soon as he completes hs thess.., He also vat~d Palestne, gong as -., far east as Messapotama. Ths trp s the foundaton of a three-act play he has wrtten, "Judth and Holofernes." Dscharged from the navy n Feb ruary, 92, Grubb returned home and accepted a pastorate and became the prncpal of a school. The followng Chrstmas, he marred one of hs teachers, who eght years before bad joned the church n one of hs meet ngs and was baptzed by hs father. Enterng Catawba College n 925, Grubb worked hs way through n three years, wthout attendng sum mer school. He made hs expenses two years by servng churches and one by (Please turn to page three) Hnes, Barbara Graves, and E. D. vsors of the publcatons, three man Kngs Park State Hosptal n New dutes. The man job wll be to re York. He joned the faculty of Wake Edmundson. Forest College n the latter part of the The Tl me and Place comm ttee re ceve the applcatons of canddates year 927 and bas served n hs present ported that the fall conventon wll he wshng to run for offces on ether capacty snce then. held at Hgh Pont College and that. of the three publcatons and to pass Gamma Sgma Upslon, local chapter the sprng conventon wll be held at on or reject each applcaton; no stu of the natonal honorary chemcal fra- Sedgefeld Wlth Worn. ans College act._ dent can run for any offce of any ternty, has prevously honored Dr. ng as host. publcaton unless be has been passed Kng by electng hm an honorary A banq~et w~ held Frday nght n on by ths board. The second duty member of the fraternty. He s also. the Carolna ~me clubhouse, _followed wll be to advse the publcatons and a member of Theta Kappa Ps, na- by a dance wth musc furmshed by see to t that they are managed n an tonal medcal fraternty. Edde Poole and hs orchestr!l. orderly and competent fashon. Lastly Dr. Kng, as we las Dr. Carpenter Rev. J. F. Fletcher of Sant Marys t wll handle the fnancal sde of and Dr. Macke of the medcal faculty, spoke to the 62 members of the Press the publcatons, seeng to t that they studed Anatomy mder the present Assocaton present on "Arman;~ents." are as effcent as possble. professor of that department, Dr. Rev. Fletcher sketched the hstory and Under ths arrangement students Herbert M. Yann. present condton of the nternatonal who desre to run for offces on any trade n arms and muntons, as a typ- of the publcatons wll present ther cal example of a socal ssue n whch applcatons to the board approxmate Golden Bough Electons Jack Lneberry of Raleg-h, was Tuesday elected presdent, of the Golden Bou~h honorary socety for next year. Other offcers elected were George Noel, vce presdent; and T o m Greenwood, secretary. treasurer. Keepers of Grounds Dong Ther Part for Centennal, Wake Forest wll haye a beautful campus by the tme vstors b~gn pourng n for the centennal, f present ndcatons tend.to prophesy any at all. Workmen have been busly dg-,. gng and plowng, spadng and rakng the bare spots around the new admnstraton buldng, fertlzng the ground, sowng grass seed, and plant ng shrubbery for the past two or three weeks. ndeed, the actvty suggests the famed "Forty-second and :Broadway" wth trucks runnng about, dumpng fresh loam here, drt there, and the workers bustlng. around and attendng to the detals, of hortcul ural actvty. Both faculty and stu dents are showng nterest n the proceedngs, and Dr. Ktchn s ever watchng the newly sown plots, hop ng to be the frst to dscover tny blades of grass pushng ther way upward through the sol. nsde the new buldng, actvty goes on both nght and day, for centennal week s drawng near, and everythng must be n readness for the dedcaton ceremony,.,,, May 30. The floor n the man foyer s beng polshed and groun.d down the press can play an mportant role. ly three weeks before nomnatons for He told of the facts brought to lght by student body offcers take place. f a an artcle on the armaments racket n desrable student refuses to make an a recent ssue of Fortune, and further applcaton, hs frends may present news whch led to the appontment of hs applcaton to the board, f they the Nye cpmmttee to nvestgate for can also present to the board a pet Congress. He ponted out that the war ton from ffteen students sayng that manufacturers have been plng up they desre that ths person be alprofts durng the depresson, the Colt lowed to run for whatever offce they Frearms Company actually declarng recommend. Thus everyone has an op. an extra dvdend n 933. As an n- portunty of beng presented before dcaton that th,ese proft-makng con- the board. cerns have no patrotsm, he told how After all applcatons have been re Englsh, troops have been klled wth (Please turn to page sx) Vcker equpment, and Amercan solder wth muntons mamfactured and sold. from t~s country. Beau Brummel Glum Ra\Vngs Poole, busness manager of the St~te Agromeck. was toastmastej:.!.----~ ! E. J. ~assen, :r. E. Mcntyre, both of Professor Forrest W. Clonts s State, and Mss cornela Atkns, of Tery unhappy, a~d he has good untl t resembles the fnest marble, Mer. e~th, were h. osts. reaso~ f9 be. For the past four and the letters WFC n the center ~at Saturday m.ornngs busness semesters Professor Clonts bas sta~d out clearly and beautfully. The sesson m;rk~d the closng of a three- been compeled. to stay n Wal:e ron ralng on the mezzanne floor s day con,ve~t!>n ~eld by the Assoca- Forest nntl the last day of exbeng put n place, and fnshng tlon, begnnng Thursday. t was tp,~ am~ato~s. due to the fact that touches to the woodwork are beng made. The lghtng fxtures wll probably be the last equpment to be n stalled. Most of tbe. swtches and basehoard sockets have been connected, and t remans now to place the over bead fxtures. Truly Wake Forest wll have a campus and buldngs of whch to be proud when the alumn of many years gather agan at ther alma mater to celebrate a century of progress. Many memores Wll doubtless be recalled by the guests as they cross the campus and retrace steps they took years ago, and doubtless, there wll be many old grads who Wn gather just before sundown on each evenng of centennal week under the gant oaks and ga2e upon new Wat, resplendent n shouette, and beckonng to new thousands to come through her portals and gan kn_owledge and wsdom. 26th sem ann-qal meetng o~ the group. one of l\fs d,lasses has alw~s Edtors and busness managers from had qte doubtful. bonor of beng nne colleges of North Carolna were the last Jn school to tal:e ts represelnted....,. examnaton. The conventon began Thurt~d~y aft- Accor4~g f9 Professor Clonts, ernoon wt~ regstraton. A wener the examnaton scltedule s made roast, followed by a dance, was hed out ll a very unque manner. that nght. Frday mornng, t4e dele- Slps of pap~r bearl~g the tme gates dvded themselves nto groups and day of t~e ~lass meetng are and held dscussons of ther problems. placed n a box, a~d these are Busness managers met wth.a. M. drawn out one by one. There are Beck, of Edwards & Broughton. Her- twelve sups n the box, corbert Htch, of the Charlotte Engravng respondng- to the sx class meet- Company, led the dscusson held by fngs each day. The frst slp s edtors of annuals; Jonathan Danels, drawn. All classes that meet on of the Ralegh News and. olserver, met the day and at the tme ndcated wth the edtors of mapznea, and P. D. on the slp tal:e ther exam on the McLean, of the Ralegh Tm,es, met mornng of the ~rst day of the wth the edtors of newspapers. exam perod. The second class Retrng offce~ are: Eugene N~- the afterdoon of the frst day, and some, Duke, vce presdent; Hoke Nor- so on, rs, Wake Forest, treasurer; and Professor Clonts- would Ul:e to Frances Mallard, of Flora Macdonald, know who has been U:awlng the secretary. slps for the :past two years. OlD GOLD WLL USE ROTOGRAVURE Enjoys Crc~J4ton n One Hundred and Forty Colleg~ Througho.ut Country Sleuth Makng Close Study of Materal Gathered From Examnaton Conducted Last Week NGHT WATCHMAN SKPS; NO DESTNATON GVEN Brown Collegate P.cture Secton To Be ssued Weekly Watchers To Be Gven Tme To Next Year Get Up Work Dur~ng Exam COLLEGATE DGEST TO Week; Around Hundred Students Have Been Examned n HAVE EGHT PAGES Past Two Weeks were 40 member publcatons durng the present year, but there wll be around 200 durng , accordng to a statement by the representatve whle n Wake Forest. They are tourng the South n an effort to solct members and to rase the total crculaton of the Dgest to the 400,000 mark. About 250,000 copes were crculated ths year. Ths eght-page secton of pctures gleaned from leadng colleges and unverstes of the country s desgned to sut the tastes of all classes of students. These brown pctures wll cover every phase of college lfe from leaders n the sports feld to outstandng campus leaders and beauty queens. The pub lsbers welcome any pctures members colleges may have to offer, and t s expected that Wake Forest wll have some appearng n the Dgest next year. The Dgest s ssued 32 tmes each year; and, shold any ssues fall on weeks when s not ssued, specal arrangements wll be made to dstrbute t through the regular crculaton facltes. Safety :Meet Scheduled Ashevlle.-The ffth annual Statewde Safety Conference wll be held n ths cty on May 7 and 8, and several hundred delegates are expected to attend, among them a large number of women who are elgble to partcpate for the frst tme. The.conference s sponsored by the North Carolna ndustral Commsson. Wake Forests favorte "fre bug" mystery s stll as far from soluton as t was when the frst blaze occurred A few students are stll beng questoned, n!ghtwatchmen are beng shfted so that even they do not know among themselves just who wu come on before or after ther perod. Ths precauton s beng taken as at the last fre the "btg" seemed to be aware of the fact that the watchman was not on. duty untl 2:30 and the fre was set about :50, and former fres have all been n the proxmty of two oclock n the mornng. The only thng whch ponts to defnteness n the case s the fact that several stores and affdavts of some of the watchmen seem at present to be at varance. One man was reported, and even admtted, to have been drnkng on the nght of the fre, and the latest rumor s that he has left town and dd not go home. However, the nvestgator explaned as he sad that no names would be gven, ths proves very lttle or nothng. f the man was trustworthy enough to be on the college nght watchmans j9b and f he bas albs for all the other fres, he couldnt possbly be the gulty man. And as for gong home, a number of fellows have been known to leave school snce the fres began. Opnon s the only clue that the detectve has to work on now asde from the subscrbed data gven by the 00 or more men wth whom he had conference last week. He s makng close study of the materal he has n band as well as mcroscopc study of the materals found at the several fres and hopes to have somethng defnte before next week. Just what wll turn up no one knows. t may be possble, as n a few former cases, that the pyromanac wll come forward and confess. Or t s possble that the fres wll cease (Please turn ~o page four) Wake Forest Preparng for Centennal Commencement Fnal plans for the Wake Forest Centennal Commencement exercses have been completed accordng to nformaton receved at ths offce and t s thought that the largest and most complete celebraton n the hstory of the couege wll take place. Specal plans of a broad nature are beng made to take care of as many as 0,000 of the schools alumn who return to celebrate the hundredth annyersary of the college. To hasten the clearng of rooms by students who wll not stay for the commencement exercses, schedules for examnatons have been moved up two days. These rooms wll be made avalable to the old grads wthout charges; a specal secton n Hunter dormtory s beng reserved for marred graduates, and Bostwck for the bachelors. Although all former students of the college are nvted to the exercses, there wll be specal reunons of the classes of 929, 924, 99, 94, and on back at fve year perods, to 834, the year the college was founded.. The program wll begn on Tuesday mornng at a.m. wth the annual meetng of the Board of Trustees Class Day Exercses at 3:30 n the afternoon, and the Commencement Sermon n the evenng by Dr. J. Clyde Turner of Greensboro. Dr. Zeno Wall presdent of the Baptst State Conven ton wll presded. A hstorcal paper wll be read on ths frst evenng by Dr. George W. Paschal. On Wednesday mornng, May 30, at 0:30, formal greetngs wll be gven by Governor Ehrnghaus and repre sentatyes of other educatonal n sttutlons. The dedcaton of the new Admnstraton buldng wll take place at 3:30 n the afternoon. E. J. Brtt of Lumberton, N. C. wll present the buldng, Wat Hall, on behalf of the Alumn. Followng ths, Claude Gore of Rockng~am, N. C., wll accept and dedcate the new buldng on behalf of the trustees. The closng part of the afternoon wll nclude the speakng contest for the Ward Medal and general awardng of medals of dfferent knds. The nformal alumn dnner wll take place at 6:00, followed by the alumn address by James (Please turn to page fve) - ~ }-

2 PAGE TWO ment over at the press conventon, atng wth some of the best men the lb ( olb an b ::Jnatk eght of the edtors are \ ery optms- of such a dreadful dsease. and after all that preparaton, too. South and naton affords. ~ tc and seem to thnk that prospects \Yhatenr s the case, and even f h. h h t k ODD Mcntyre s looked on by amaare brg ter t S year t an ercto- the nyestguton proves nothng, we Alpha P Omega fratern Y ls oo. teur.columnsts to be the acme of perf. d f t th t qute ng forward to a successful. house ore, we can say e m e Y a hope the :fre-bug ~~ll ether leave party-t seems. fectlon when t comes to versatlty and a number of graduates wll be faced perpetual freshness n hs scrbblngs. school, commt sucde, reform, or at --- d h e al \-l.tll the d"lenlu of choosng ther t Perhaps that s true, an we av - Dorothy Davs s sad to be grea - future course n regard to the latter least stop settng fre to ou buldngs. ly loved by two or three Meredth ~~ ~~s ::~~;e~o~~:~ ~c~:::;~a~~/~:. queston asked by the Dgest. Just what we as ndvduals or dames. mraton. Odd tells of meetng up wth The college graduate can no longer as the student body at large should --- a mld, quet fellow on the tran who Somethng "rotten n Denmark" n.,~ 0 d the poltcal and socal ssues. h d h ld b. d. seems so settled, content, wholesome, ST~\FF ~ uo or w at our atttu e s ou e S an offce n the Alumn BU mg. ambtous and happy. He found hm to THnlusox Gm-a;swoon. Edtor n-clt~t of the Jay, for he s playng an n- not hard to say. We must admt that - be a theologcal student headed for the 0 L TRt:>,nLoou. Jla~~a,qnu Edtor ereasnaly mr)ortant role n the eco- And Mary Ella Newsome can not msson felds and even though he knew w.,t.oo CuE}:K B~<uw< Jlauager-Elect ~ we have a nasty stuaton hete. t shoot a pstol. t"~h C.QGLENx,.!&. Sports Edtor nomc lfe of the naton. Collegana _ that "horne" would never be Amerca J. CE UlS}:XJERRY Paculty Advser S a property-destroyng, nete- any more ths young fellow set Mc- STAJoP OFFCERS s no longer an abstract term repre- "f What s the natter wth Hoke Nor- ntyre to thnkng that he- should lke \,,. M t of -OUn" nen wrackng, and wll c\ entua y, not d E - Mtller? d.r.e "-us anat~nf] Edtor sen ng n urge group 0 rs an m Y to have a son that could have such a \V. &. DJxox..-.<ocate Edtor d h d th f fo d b lf t l g tuaton - h f f th t b rf ctly happy \f. E. GA>rH:&E.r.,L<HocaJe Edtor an women w o o no ng or ur stoppe, e a e- ann Sl. dehg t u a as o e pe e B r,nt " Edt And Chrlstne Adams s now the h f f d,. eoua ot l th d d h n trustng a bg er power or oo BEx rs!rer Kt~<w Edtor yent s mt enjoy e soeta an recre- A buldng wll burn an t c ex- lucky grl. and drnk and shelter and have such a ~.;.~~"K""~~~~un:;.:::::::::.:::::: ::::::.~;~~~~~e ~~l~~ ntonal advantages supposedly offered ctement someone wll fal to reach --- zeal for the unsaved that starvng ms- ~;:~G~m~~~~.~:,:::: ::.:::::::::J.~~~~~~b;~~ ~:,~~~~~ by the modern ~\.mercan college. the outsde and persh n the flames. Katherne Hnes and Charle Har- son feld look lke the only way to J s ~- R t rs are gong to put on a party-and Wh t d orr_x ;ST, R~:. cw8 epor.er -\nd the colleoe student s becommo- \"e pt opose the followng steps to happness and eternty. a o you HOKE :\m<r, Oolummst - o o want everybody, t seems, to come and thnk? con;;;cous of ths fact. be taken or atttudes to be assumed dressed as a Wtch! STAFF \YRTERS \ns. l:. B. EARXSHAW. Humn Mns. D.WJD ). S~OOT Sodty Mns. E. T. C<TTE><m:x LbrallJ ~AX.\GERA" DE,\J~T)ENT ROSCOE.,,~ALL, JR.. lrzt~,.rtx.n.g Man.auer BAR~ES EL.S...t. sf. A.(ltrrt.vn.Q llanager HAROr.v \\".\RREX rrrulufon Manager h.. WE BET you lked the nstallaton Dr. Hubert recently confded to ls servce Sunday, From reports ft was RELGOUS GROUP GVES MUSlCALE To Be Gven Tomorrow Nght n Place of Regular Sunday Evenng ~ervces The B. S. U. Musc department of Wake Forest College wll present a muscal program n the church audtorum at 8 oclock, Sunday evenng, May 3, 934. The program wll be gven n place of the regular_ Sunday evenng servce, beng the last presentaton of the out-gong B. S. U. Musc department. The program wll open wth an or- (J gan prelude by Jay Anderson, drec.., tor of the Department, and followed \~ St."BSCRlTOX PR.E: $~.00 PER CO~LEG~~ YEAR W( take the atttude of the edtor by the student body: Frst, admt of the Daly A.lln, Unversty of that we dont know who s gulty. llnos: "Graduates should take.:\.nd t s yery true that we do not. anythng they cnn get snce exper- Second, suspect that t s possble for ence " ll probably proye more val- t to be anyone. Accordng to exuable than graduate study. For that perts ths s true. Thrd, every stumattet, tumy lack the funds for fur- dent ought to watch closely for any ther schoolng." ndcatye sgns or clues and report pupls n hs Vrgl class that he w~s really mpressve to a lot of people. under the mpresson that some of hls A adv n town who always had the boys were usng a translaton. Some relg~us work of -the students at heart of them, Doctor? called up George Grffn and sad t by a hymn n whch the congregaton wll be led by the B. S. U. chor. Followng ths, an anthem arrange. ment of "Onward Chrstan Solders" wll be rendered by the chor. A! Martn wll next sng "Ont of th~ Deep," whch wll be followed by Bachs "Now Let Every Tongue Adore Thee" by the chor. ~ )! em btr of NORTH CAROLKA NTr~RCOLLEGATE lrlcss ASSOC.\TOX Approv d b\ MERCHA::-;Ts ASSOCATOX. ltalegh We look forward wth confdence to offcals mmedately anythng to the future, but we are not lettng foud that.t may be nvestgated. Entl"red r~s; second elnrs matter.tununry at th,,ostoffce at Wake Forest, North our Judgment become warped by Fout th, keep so everlastngly vg Carolnu, under th~ act of :Mnreh a blnd optmsm. We are n a perod } t and on the J. ob that we wll catch All matte ~ of bnsne:-;:; should hp adtlress~jd to the Busness )nnn.:er. Box :n.~. ond nl of transton-where we wll e, entu- the fre-bug, wrng a confesson from other mutters ~hould be atldressell to the Edtor-n-Chef. Box ~s. ally fnd ourseh-es no one knows. We hm as to the other :fres and place Advert~ng rntes quotpd on request. ~ Subscrpton due n ndyun< e. bele\-e that experence wll proye a hm where he cannot further mar Rnle;h Offte: Edwurd:s & Broughton Co :: ::.. far more valuable teacher to the the peace of the nght, destroy prop- Whe e yet was ever tolmd a nother ~radnate than wll further s:hool-. erty, or endanger the lves of _young Whod gve her booby [o another! mg. For some, graduate work s not men as they sleep when sleep S due. -Gay: Fables. only desrable, but necessary; for others, graduate work s not only un- f you want fngerprnts on your pant job, put a "wet pant" sgn on t. CAMPUS CONSCOUSNESS Wake Forest has the merted reputaton of possessng Olle of the most beautful college cammses m the country. t does not exst m ts present form because of the efforts of some hgh-salared landscape engneer, but rather as a result of careful collecton and preservaton. n the past few ssues of the Or.D GoLD AND BL.\CK much can be seen concernng the plans of the Buldngs and Grounds Commttee to further enhance the beauty of our campus by the plantng of addtonal shrubbery and the constructon of seyeral more walkways. necessary, but posth ely harmful. At any rate, we leave the queston to you. After all, t s the ndvdual Lo\ e most usually starts n the who must take every factor nto con-... "d t d k h h H heart and ends m the dmmg room. s era on an ma -e S c olce. e should choose hs future course wth N 0 one ever lkes to be pted or care. thought weak, but the same people never stop to thnk that rudeness s a sgn of lack of breedng, and poor breedng should not be scorned but pted. PYROMANAC Our fre-bug stuaton here at Wake Forest S the most serous thng that has beset the college snce the Cvl War. Somehow m hs ruthless way the denzen of the nght s able to take away hundreds and Ar-dsturbances : cyclones, tornadoes, hurrcanes, and strng bands. thousands of dollars worth of prop- _-\. slap on the back s worth two --- vlas one of the best~ A "\vel known There s one boy on the campus who The B. S. U. quartet No., eomposed of John Lawrence, Jack Hutchns, A. Martn and Henry " Beeker wll present the arrangement h faculty member sad Georges speech pocketed seventeen dollars last mont was the smoothest, most graceful, He seems to be very talented n wrtng more forceful and fuller of pose than term papers for the freshmen. any he has heard a student make n of "Crossng the Bar" whch wll be followed by an organ solo, Sbeluss "Fnlanda," Jay Anderson at the organ. The B. S. U. quartet No. 2 composed of Roy Lles, Ed Swann, A. Martn and Henry Beeker wll then sng "On Great Lone Hlls" from Fnlanda. The concludng numbers on --- church n ten years. To tell the truth, Who s the boy who made a trp to we rant see how the B. S. C. or stu Ralegh last week for a date wth hs dent relgous actvtes as the "congrl (at St. Marys) and when he got nectng lnk" of the college and the there--the dear old lady told hm that church could have been presented n hs grls was n the hosptal n a a better way. nearby cty. He made a trp to that cty the followng afternoon. see by the newspapers (apol to Wll) that Eu and Ph are to get some new furnture. Good dea-half of Dr. Culloms relgon class was forced to st on the floor the other day. "Cueball" seemed rather embarrassed when four or fve of the boys on the foor stretched out and went sound asleep, too. NAMES are such a nusance anyway! the program wll nclude a solo, "My Shakespeare was always bothered wth Task," sung by John Lawrence, and em. We seldom remember all the names two anthems, "Ferce WaShe Wld of folks we meet. Perhaps you had Bllow" and "Fear Not 0 srael." The already notced that the name of ths postlude wll be Meyerbeers "Coronaspace had been changed a lttle. Well, ton March." that was perhaps for the same reason Members of the chor are: that women always get new hats for Frst tenors: John Lawrence, George Easter. t s the same column any- Noel, Jack Hutchns, Roy Lles. way. And we trust the purpose s stll Second tenors: Talmage Sler, Ed. the same and that the ends accom- Swann, Colon Roscoe. pushed wll be the same. We had rather Frst basses: B. B. Shepherd, Ray be changed even another tme or not Brady T G Ell D "d H Recently was travelng between s, avl arrs, Dck Wake Forest and Durham when some- appear at all than to fal to make ths Hcks. thng or other happened to my car. a wh.olesome bt of readng for JOUr Second basses: A. Martn, Henry spare tme. B k p t was rather late at nght, so went ee er, au! Sholar. to a farmers home nearby to spend --- Solos n the anthem cfear Not, 0 ~t the nght. Now stop f you have heard OSCAR, remnd the dawndy gentle- lsra~l" wll be sung by A. Martn, ths one before--the door was opened men to drnk ther coffee rawther strong bass; George Noel, tenor: John Lawby a bee-oot-ful grl of about eghteen. tonght. Bah jove! those bally exams renee, tenor; Jack Hutchns, tenor; stated the reason for my vst and are uncomfortably close. Roy Lles, bartone.-- was asked nsde. "Wal," sad the The group of muscans s totally farmer after bad shaken bands, there ;-~ , a student affar, havng had no supers hardly room, but guess that can Art and Potatoes vson nor drecton other than stu~ put you up wth. dents. The members have been prac- (anq prnom. no.< aq.<l!m q.l:noql ) teng for some weeks on ths pro- By \\"LLE WLLS gram, and the organzaton has to erty and an un~old amount of sent- n the face. You wll have_t_o_e-xcuse me f.some meut n buldngs and college souve- of the so-called news above s a lttle mrs. At the same tme he s able The Gab Bag late gettng to you. had some left to strke terror nto the hearts of.! : over from last week, and what s the have a frend who s an artstthat s, he pants. Now as to what be pants, and whether t s good or bad, am not able to say. am not a some extent served a purpose as a glee club n the absence of a regular <r glee club. use of wearng out the tps of my connosseur. all the resdents of the college and ll tell you now to save you the fngers typng more news when al- But my frend bad two falngs-one town. No one can sleep peacefully trouble of readng further, Stork, that ready have some? of them qute depl<lrable--hs greatwth the constant dread of hearng am not gong to use you as news ths est pleasure seemed to come through the shrll :fre alarms whch would week. The Student and ths publca- hs eatng. Yes, he was always eatton have pcked on you too much al-~ R - C ng. t s surprsng, ndeed, that ths mean that all they own wll soon be ready. However, mght add that e 90US enter eternal "stuffng hmself" dd not reconsgned to the fre-demons passon. notced your fancee and several of her "STRAGHTWRES" sut n corpulence, but for some rea- A smlar program wll be gven n the audtomum at Meredth College,,, Ralegh, N. C., on Wednesday evenng at eght oclock of next week. Faculty, students, and townspeople are very cordally nvted to attend ths presentaton on Sunday evenng and the Meredth program on Wednesday evenng, All ths s Yery wrll ndeecl. t s a fact, howeyer, that a college campus s notced far more by Ys tors than by students. The old expresson "Famlarty breeds contempt" whle a lttle brond, can be Yery well appled to our case. Wthout the ad and cooperaton of the students all the efforts of all the gardeners m the world wll go for naught. What ths school Heds ;; to become "Campus Conscou~." Too, t s serous because t s so frendsrdngaboutthespacousdrves! ~son t dd not. He was as lean and uncertan. No one knows whether of Wake Forest last Sunday afternoon. DEAN BRYAN s a good scholar, but lanky as a brch pole. have always knoll, or tracng the course of some he doesnt know eve-rythng. At least mantaned the thought that artsts- tny stream several mles nto the We show no hestancy n spreadng to the four corners of the earth the prowess of our athletc teams. That s \cry well A college team that does not hm e the unanmous backng of the student body wll not go very far. We are not pleadng for alessenng of ths enthusasm -that would ndeed be fatal. What we are askng s that students take prde n ther campus. That s all. f they wll do ths, all that we desre wn naturally folow. Students wll be more thoughtful n cuttng across the grass and uprootng shrn bbery. After all, these mproyements demand a :fnancal out!ay of no small sum. the :fre wll be n ths buldng or Chetty goes wth a grl whose last be doesnt know.japanese. Proof of whatever ther art mght be--should back-country. another. t s uncanny how the pyro- name s Hardee. Qute a concdence ths came the other nght when he was have as ther frst and predomnant t was whle on one of these excurmanac has been able to escape ob- that both ther frst names happen to n a meetng of a group of students love, ther art. So you see, t rather s~;>ns, that my horse brought me to a sen aton thus far. There seems to be Maron. who were lstenng to a returned ms- dstressed me to see my frend gve spot, on the top of one of the knolls, son_ar! tell about the great Japan~se. hmself over to hs gluttony. from where an especally beautful be no regular tme of the week or Our fashon parade hstory professor Chrstan sant, Kagawa. The meetmg Hs other falng was equally as scene could be observed. looked out month for hm to set the blazes, al- has been seen qute often lately wth proceeded and ~he speaker kept men- bad. Although he was at hs best n across. the valley. There below me though untl the last conflagraton t a certan Mss Eakes. Are you really tonng Kagawa s name, so fnally the hs pantngs of nature, of the out- were mles and mles of wooded /connserous ths tme, professor? de~n asked, "Well, bow do you spell doors, he seldom ventured forth to try, wth occasonal streams or roads was notced that all the fres occurred ths fellows name, anyway?" The ms-. h 0 k h N d l"ttl d h nearby beauty-spots to capture ther Wndng t rough t and reflectng the. near two o cloc - m t e mornmg. ~ o Havent seen Glen Cress out of class s onary gr nne a e an m sc ev r ht f th ft ths semester but what a local young ously stepped to the board and deftly lov~llness m 0 Ths may have been lg 0 e a ernoon sun n much one can guess whether t s a student, d. f k d t lazmess, or t may have been lack of the same way that many-hued rbbons lady was wth hm. She drves a 934 p ace a senes o mar s an s range th. d a ctzen of the town or by chance Chevy coupe, and m not gong to men- symbols on the board n a vertcal col- energy due to such an unusuaf amount m e Wn ows of department stores t d h t th umn. Dr. Bryan accepted the spelllng beng.expended on meals, and on eat- n large ctes do. got off my horse, some on s er w o comes o e co - ton any names, but her ntals are as Correct but at last dd get the name ng between meals. once thought and then stood there a long tme, lege vcnty to do hs or her foul Helen Bennett. h t h d k" th b f correctly n Englsh. t a t e starchness of hs fo~d was r n mg tn e eauty o the scene deeds under the shades of darkness., d h --t-h bj t,. h the greatest factor n ths apparent Fnally the sun began to set, and,... An w lle am on e su ec o s- --- SuspCOn pomts to Hu_ nte. r dorm - tory professors (whch was not), the lazness- had. read somewhere that was gven a tremendous thrll as b f h JAPANESE OR no Japanese, we con- an over abundance of starch n a det watched the colors of the entre land tory, ut o course t S S mere y same one mentoned a~bove confessed, gratulate the Dean on what he and th mght lead to such results, and t was scape change, and blend nto the speculaton because a smart fre-bug whle on class Monday mornng, at hs class are plannng for ths week. true that my frend had a sort of shades of the late afternoon sky. would try to throw the pursuers off hteeachha ndg nfervoemr. read the text he was Ths teacher and hs progressve Sun- super-fondness for starchy foods, es- Suddenly t came to me! Here w!w " day school class are expectng to be at hs tral and one of the easest ways You are not by yourself, nether have home to at least 00 members and vs- pecally potatoes. He could down a the very scene had been lookng would be to blame someone else. more than seven or three of your pupls tors n an entrely new room n the whole platter of fred potatoes at one for! Ths would certanly awaken a f just a lttle more care s taken on the part of each student the results of ther combned efforts wll soon :Mystery seems to surround the whole affar. We dont know f we be evdent. Peoplt--l"stors-wll d - have seen the gulty man. t s enread t. No, no, yon are not by yourself. almost completed new Wat Hall. Asked sttng, and then have the audacty desre n the obsequous mnd of my f he was begnnng hs second hundred and perfect boldness to ask for an- frend to forget hs selfshness and. years by movng nto the new buldng other plate mmedately. Such was the respond to the call of nature and art wanted to let yon know somethng about one of our llustrous nght watch men, but for the lfe of me cant fnd out what hs name s. the dean repled that he would lke to enormty of hs capacty! Ths scene, f t mpressed hm one teach the class at least another hundred determned, f possble, to rd hm tenth as much as t had me, would years We understand the class s tak- or these two weaknesses, and so save, start hm pantng mmedately. And ng great prde n the fact that t s for arts sake, one who was surely so, maybe the mpulse would be great one of the most consstent of all the treadng a downward patn-forget- enough to set hm arght. ~ thought.,. college Sunday school classes and feels tlng hs talent n hs greed and ap- of ths a lot as wended my way back that when completely orented n ts Parently rresstble desre. Wlat a home n the growng dusk, and by new room wth pano and song books servce should be renderng art, the tme reached the house was VlSt our campus an W go away... lk. B t th t lk - t b ttrelv posstble that you room Wltb ta ng. u. eu a - w no e. ". d t t t th h t - be hm, that he eats at your boardmg e rmen a o e sc oo ; W.. th t bl f f d t house, that you st by hm on class, e mos va ua e orm o a ver tsmg _. th t h. h l t or that he S your best frend. t - a " c S unsoug. stands to reason that he s someones THE NATONS GRADUATES There appears n ths weeks Lterary Dgest a very pertnent and searchng artcle, "Opportunty Knocks agan at College Grnduates Door." The artcle embodes, n answer to a questonnare sent out by the Dgest, nne repl s by edtors of key college ewspapers n wdely separated parts of the country. What are the prospects for jobs ths June? f a graduate cannot secure a job, s t advsable for hm or her to contnue n postgraduate work? The latter queston wll undoubtedly have to be faced by many college graduates th;~ J nne. Whle best frend. We wonder f only one person knows about the fres or f there are as many as two or three n on the secret. f t s a pyromanac there would he only one, accordng to the expert who s here ths week, but f some one s rascally enough to promulgate such ncendary acton, there s lkely more than one, and we hope f ths s the case, one of them wll weaken and gve some clue to the secret. We say "more power" to the nvestgator, and eyen f the culprt turns out to be a promnent member of the student body, we are of the opnon that he ought to be removed where he may be cured f you, blessed reader, can tell me the name of the guard who went to sleep one nght last week and had hs gun stolen from hs pocket, t wll most certanly be wrtten up n the next ssue. So far as can gather, he has not yet been able to recover hs lost weapon. When s a famous newspaperman gong to break loose. Hes held n and been nce long enough wth a Meredth grl-and wastng all the OLD GoLD AND BLACK show passes, too! Who was that young lady Dr. Jones (of the Math department) was bddng such a fond adeu last Thurs day nght week? What edtng man saw the State Frosb and Soph battle wth blond Jane Stanback of Flora Macdonald; and just where were they when sad battle was takng place? Frank Norrs got a great dsappontto match that t wll be able to do some thought, f could succeed n ths! qute enthusastc. real college Sunday school work and felt that she would be my everlastng Over the supper table, between gve a large number of fellow a chance benefactoress. t was not strange, mouthfuls of graved bscut and fred to hear Dr. Bryans characterstc suppose, that n ths case decded ham, told my frend of my dscovlessons. PROFESSORS seem to be on our mnd today. The next one that comes bobbng up s Dr. Poteat. Dr. "Blle," sometmes called the "sweetheart of Wake Forest," has a remarkable sense of humor. He always gets a laugh from students n any class. Recently he stole quetly nto Dr: Speas lecture room, got a drnk of water, and whle the younger "Bll" was concentratng on physcs-or sumpn-stole an eraser almost from under hs eyes, made a face at the class, and slently tp-toed away. We lttle realze t, bnt wthout doubt we have the prvlege of assocto fght fre wth fre--that s, wonld ery and nssted that be go wth me use natures own mplements n brng- the followng day to the spot, and ng back to my slppng frend a love that he mght be rewarded f he for the beauty that was everywhere brought along hs easel and pallete... about hm. t s doubtful whether he heard me, We lved at the tme n a secton or, f h,e dd, whether he pad any of the country that was bflly and attenton; he was engrossed n desteep; the exact steepness would be vastatng the thrd plateful of fred hard to state--people used to lvng potatoes. He merely punctuated my n fat country would call t moun- conversaton wth an "Uh bub," now tanous, whle the real Blue-Rdgers and then, takng care not to let hs would call t a "leetle hlly, but they loquacty nterfere wth hs mastcawont make you tred when you walk ton. up them." used to love to wander Wth some persuason was able to about through the hlls, sometmes on get hm to accompany me the next horseback, sometmes afoot, enjoyng afternoon to the spot. We nad made r the marvelous lands!lape from some (Please turn to page fve) REUGOU~ Assur nstallaton S Last Sund c Last Sunday frst part of the c new members o[ Councl took the ng offcers n tl: program. An marked! ths sg calendar of rel the year. The outgong Wyan Wash bur ~- ts work over t( wll carry out t the campus for of ths year and for t.he next scho n the nstal members of t placed themselve form. The new lne. Each outgo n a :few word pedged hs best _ the dutes of hs formed a lnk st lege, represented and the church, tor Easley were bref remarks ( ng presdent, st the purpose of lnk to really : college closer to: year. Whle stll councl sad n 3, 4: "Ths OJ tng the thngs stretchng for.~ whch are befor the goa unto callng of God After the cou sumed ther preached a fore he declared tha lege and of the be judged by th.ty and. effcen ~ conduct and at on the athletc houses, n the every phase of lfe. The councl nto offce s cor fn, presdent; J. presdent; _Ed. presdent; Tho presdent; F. P. M. R. Brown, t -J burn, drector Junus Martn, college Sunday _., A. K. Cheek, h Class; Ed BealE dent VolunteeJ Dxon, leader o zaton. Roy Ly good are repres Martn s n c to the Baptst ;. r Falk Johnson ganzaton. Ths group the work of th campus whch Chrstan work. Addtonal t superntendent, unt has as ger ton, assocate John LawrencE offcers of Dr. Reece, presden vce presdent vce presdent; and Henry Bee n Dr. Red: presdent, J. V dent, and Gran Bert Taylor s group. Dr. Pot Reed Wood. Th B. B. Shepberc dent s Fred Robert Campb.s James B. Br Professor Ca L}lpton for p for vce presd retary, and Sa The B. Y. P up wth Glen Olln Owens, ~ ter Smth, Htchns, chor the varous ur J. W. Lynch; Knght; Rol: Clmbers; Ber ard; B. D. T Stroupe, W. Woody of the Mnsteral Cl next year by presdent s c tary s.r. D. s P. B. Nckel Dxon, the re Ths group s tst Student C and on the st Martn. The Volunt headed by E vce presdent tary-treasurer porter.

3 OUP StGALE n wth an oru drec. and followed congregaton S. U. chor. arrange. Solders" chor. A. "Out of the followed by Tongue Adore ~ \~ No., eom. Jack: Henry " arrangement wll be Sbeluss at the No.2 com- Swann, A. wu. then from Fnnumbers on a solo, "My wrence, and. Wld Henry "Fear Not, 0,t A. Martn, John La.w. tl~hns, tenor; s totally no superthan stu- been pracths P:O on has to * or roads reflectng the ~ n much ~ nu:eu rbbons stores otr my horse, a. long tme, of the scene. to set, and thrll as entre landnto the sky. Here war lookng my huh, now to let hs hs Dastca- was able to me the n:ext We nad made r fve) "... RElGOUS GROUP ASSUME. OFFCES nstallaton Set vce Was Held Last Sunday Mornng n Church Last Sunday mornng, durng the frst part of the church servce, sxteen. new members of the Baptst Student Councl took the places of the retr ng offcers n the annual nstallaton program. An mpressve ceremony marked! ths sgnfcmt event n the calendar of relgous happenngs of the year. The outgong councl, headed by l Wyan Washburn, offcally turned ts work over to the new one whch wll carry out the relgous work of the campus for the remanng weeks of ths year and be n charge of them for the next school sesson, n the nstallaton c.eremony, the members of the retrng councl placed themselves n lne on the plat form. The new men were n a second! _ lne. Each outgong offcer ntroduced n a few words hs successor who pedged hs best efforts to carry out the dutes of hs offce. The men then formed a lnk shape n whch the col lege, represented by Presdent Ktchn, and the church, represented by Pas tor Easley were connected. n a few bref remarks George Grffn, ncomng presdent, stated that t would be the purpose of the men formng the lnk to really brng the church and college closer together for the comng year. Whle stll n ths poston, the councl sad n unson Phlppans :r: 3, 4: "Ths one thng do, forget tng the thngs whch are behnd, and stretchng forward to the thngs whch are before, press on toward the goa unto the prze of the hgh callng of God n Chrst Jesus." After the councl members had resumed ther seats, Rev. Easley preached a forceful sermon n whch he declared that the work of the college and of the B. S. U. was not to be judged by the organzatonal actv.ty and. effcency, but _rather by the ; conduct and atttude of the students on the athletc feld, n the fraternty houses, n the class rooms, and n every phase of the students secular lfe. The councl whch was nducted nto offce s composed of George Grf- - fn presdent; J. D. Wllams, frst vce pr~sdent; Ed. Chamblee,_ second vce presdent; Thomas Ells, thrd vce presdent; F. P. CovngtOl, secretary; M. R. Brown, treasurer; Glenn Black J burn, drector of the B. Y. P. Us.; Junus Martn, superntendent of the ;.}. r.. college Sunday School department; A. K. Cheelc, head of the Mnsteral Class; Ed Beale, presdent of the Stu dent Volunteer Movement; W. R. Dxon, leader of the Methodst organ zaton. Roy Lyles and Clarence Hob good are representatves at large; Al Martn s n charge of subscrptons to the Baptst Student Magazne, and Falk Johnson s reporter for the or ganzaton. Ths group of men wll supervse the work of the varous unts on the campus whch are concerned wth Cbrstan work. Addtonal to Junus Martn as superntendent, the Sunday School unt bas as general offcers E. S. Lupton, assocate superntendent; and John Lawrence, secretary. The class offcers of Dr. Bryans class are John Reece, presdeut; Mllard Brown, frst vce presdent; Paul Berry, second vce presdent; Roy Bryant, secretary; and Henry Beeker, chorster. n Dr. Reds class H. Clay Cox s presdent, J. W. Wlder s vce pres dent, and Grant Kennedy s secretary. Bert Taylor s the chorster of ths group. Dr. Poteats class s headed by Reed Wood. The frst vce presdent s B. B. Shepherd. the second vce pres dent s Fred Lype. The secretary s Robert Campbell, and the treasurer.s James B. Brower. Professor Carrolls class chose E. S. J,jlpto.n for presdent, Worley Earp for vce presdent, T. G. Ells for sec retary, and Sam Smth for chorster. The B. Y. P. U. organzaton heads up wth Glenn Blackburn drector; Olln Owens, assocate drector; Vatter. Smth, secretary; and Jack Htchns, chorster. The presdents of the varous unons follow: Roy Lles, J. W. Lynch; Fon Schofeld, Lucle Knght; Robert Rchardson, Hll Clmbers; Ben Fsher, Charles How ard; B. D. Teachey, Eureka; Henry Stroupe, W. L. Poteat; and T. K. Woody of the Lvngston unon. The Mnsteral Class wll be headed for next year by A. K. Cheek. The vce presdent s Olln Owens, the secre tary s J. D. Wllams, the chorster s P. B. Nckens, the hstoran s W. R. Dxon, the reporter s J. M. Wlder. Ths group s represented on the Baptst Student Councl by Ed Chamblee, and on the student legslature by J. J. Martn. The Volunteer Movement ere s headed by Ed Beale. Ben Fsher s vce presdent, J. A. Stevens s secre -,. tary-treasurer, and Olln Owens s reporter. =--Ban_d Re_hers t s tbe request of Dr. sbell that all band members report promptly for the Tuesday and Thursday nght bantl rehearsals, the tme havng been moved up to 7 :00 Jl.m. There wll also be ~hort practce each nght durng exams n ortler to provde a means of recreaton and to complete work on the muscal program to be rendered at the Centennal celebraton. Tle band voted 00 Jler cent for ths latter plan, and als ---- MEDAL S DONATED BY COACH WEAVER MATTHEWS WNS CURRN TROPHY Student Body Wll Select Wnner Medal s Presented Annually By By Ballot Wednesday J. B. Currn of Roxboro, Wake Afternoon Forest Alumnus A medal has been donated by Coach L. J. Matthews won the decson Jm Weaver of Wake Forest to be over Brown and Wlder Sunday evegven annually to the member of the nng, Aprl 29, at the Rolesvlle Baptst novel, and has completed between He s now at work on a hstorcal absent members are urged to graduatng class that s voted the Church for the Currn Medal. attend. most profcent and outstandng n n 929, Rev. J. B. Currn, of Roxscholarshp and athletcs. The entre boro, N. C. set asde the fund for ths STERN NTERVEWS student body wll select the wnner medal. t was hs desre to have t KATHERNE CORNELL from a group of men who wll be de presented each year to the junor or clared elgble and whose names wll senor who prepared the best oraton Edwn L. Stern, the well known be placed on the ballot. on the general subject "Chrst n Modfreshman footballer, last week Coach Weaver stated that he hoped ern Lfe." The partcpants do not blundered nto a meetng wth one of have to be mnsteral stadents, but the medal would. promote a greater the most famous celebrtes n the anyone may enter the contest who Unted States. Stern was n Ralegh ncentve among those athletes who desres to do so. Rev. Currn beleved last week-end n accordance wth an are senors. Comng as t does from that Chrst should be the center of old Wake Forest custom. Feelng a man who s so loved ana respected every students lfe. somewhat thrsty, Stern decded to m on the Wake Forest campus, the The speakers of the evenng were bbe some of the well known 3.2. Ac ntroduced by Dr. J. Rce Qusenberry. cordngly he entered the Tavern, lo medal wll mean a great honor to the Dr. sbell, Dr. Rhea, and Prof. Mathcated n the basement of the Sr fortunate wnner. eney acted as judges. The decsons Walter Hotel. Votng for ths year wll take place were prompt, beng delvered mmed- Stern was standng at the bar en- Wednesday afternoon from l: 3 o untl ately after the last speaker had gaged n the gentle art of guzzlng fnshed. when he notced a young lady of strk- 5 : 30 n the bology lecture room. T. R. Brown, the frst speaker of ug appearance surrounded by several The followng men are elgble to the evenng, used for hs topc, masculne admrers. Stern stopped receve the medal: "Chrst Reenters the Economc Order." guzzlng and looked at the young lady F. T. Allen, Bert Grffn, H. J. Mal He stated n hs oraton that Chrst wth curosty. "Who s t?" he asked loy, Jm Partn, Howard Earp, Dune must be remembered n busness. He a fellow student. \ also commended the present polcy, "Oh, thats the famous Katherne Wlson, Robert Forney Ed Lawhorne, nasmuch as human worth s beng Cornell," the brother student repled. Joe Mulhern, Ernest "Stork" Swng, placed above ndustry. Whereupon Stern abruptly eft hs Johnne Hcks. J. M. Wlder spoke on "Chrst and glass of beer and walked over to Mss Unemployment." Mr. Wlder sad that Cornell. " saw you n Alen Oorn. the prncples of Chrst nstlled n thought you were good. You know, Another Warehouse Planned ndustry are the only means of re- apprecate legtmate stage produc- Wlson.-Ths cty, the leadng auc- levng the present unemployment tons." stuaton. Greed and selfshness must "Dd you really lke t?" Mss Cor ton tobacco market of the world, plans be overcome-chrst or chaos. nell smled. to add another warehouse to the nne L. J. Matthews, wnner of the medal, " most certanly dd": Stern. large ones already n operaton here. used "Chrst and Wealth" as hs topc. "Well, certanly apprecate your Plans contemplate completon of the The story of Lazarus and the rch man complments." structure before the openng of the was the bass of hs oraton. Matthews Thus the ntervew was :completed. stated that wealth keeps people from And there lngers n Sterns mnd the 934 season next September. R. G. enjoyng the deepest concepton of memory of hs assocaton wth the Smth and W. G. Carr, Jr., have been Chrstanty. Mr. Matthews, a mnsgreat. granted a permt to erect the, buldng. teral student, s a senor here. ts rrtatng and. t means jangled nerves Yes, ts rrtatng to lsten to that constant, tuneless hummngand more than that, the hummng s.a sgn of jangled nerves. f you notce any of those telltale nervous habts n yourself -f you whstle through your teeth-juggle your keys-drum COSTLER TOBACCOS \ on the table-then ts tme to start takng care of yourself. Get enough sleep-fresh arrecreaton - and watch your smokng Remember, you can smoke as many Camels as you want. Ther costler tobaccos never jangle your nerves. Camels are made from :fner, MORE EXPENSVE TOBACCOS than any other popular brand of cgarettes! TUNE N! Copyrl&ht, 934, B.. :Bqnolds Tobaeoo Camp~ VEWS AND NTERVEWS (Contnued from page one). c;lofng jantoral work, hs job takng eght hours of the day. After college, be taught school, and n 93 resgned, and devoted two years to wrtng. He entered here last fall. Grubb has wrtten over 200 poems, one three act play, three one-act plays (all of whch have been successfully presented by amateur players), one novel, and four or fve short stores. 75,000 and 00,000 words of t. He plans to contnue hs work next year at Carolna, and now has four churches around Chapel HlL He ntends to major n the drama, and hs ultmate am s to teach n college and preach n country churches. Grubb had ths to say about Wake Forest: "The sprtual sgnfcance of Wake Forest s far superor to the materal value of ts plant and equpment. Ths grows out of the fact that Wake Forest has nvested her money n character and not n materal thngs-n keepng here such men as Dr. Sledd, Dr. Gulley, Dr. Poteat, and others. And t seems tllat she s gong to bold her own, for she s tranng a corps of young men that are unsur passed." Sleep and Learn To learn whle we sleep may be the academc prncple of the future, f experments of Dr. Ralph B. Wnn of the psychology department of the College of the Cty of New York prove a success. He plans to take ten students and place them n a state of hypnoss durng the experments. They st slently for a short tme, whle small gray balls are suspended before ther eyes. Only a few mnutes elapse before ther eyes shut automatcally. "Yet they are not asleep," accord ug to Dr. Wlnn. "They are n a state of lght hypnoss. then begn to lecture n a slow even tone, attemptng to evoke clear-cut vsons n the students mnds. Actually ther mnds wll be wde awake, lstenng to me, and n ther magnatons they wll be taken to the places about whch am lecturng or the scenes am depctng. PAGE THREE NEW FURNTURE FOR EU ANO PH College Arranges for Complete Furnshng of the Two Halls n New Buldng Fnancal arrangements wth the college have been made whereby the two lterary socetes, Euzelan and Phlomathesan, can completely!urn sh ther new halls on the top. :floot of the now almost complete admrs traton buldng, Charles U. Harrs, presdent of the Euzelans, announced Thursday. Work on the Euzelan hall wll be gn Monday, and should be completed by commencement. Presdent Harrs, who made most of the arrangements for fnancng and contractng the work sad. The Eu hall wll be furnshed wth a dark blue plush carpet, wth char upholsterng of a lghter blue. Draperes wll be n gold. The woodwork -chars, rostrum, and offcers desks -wll be completely remodeled, rebult, and recolored n ther natural colors, sold walnut. The walls wll be done n Dutch vory. The color scheme was worked out by the nteror decoratng statr of W. E. Detrck, archtect who de sgned the new admnstraton buld ng. The upholsterng and remodelng s beng done n Henderson by one of the best cabnet makers n the state. A representatve of that company was loud n hs prase of the plans. The Euzellan clock, perhaps the most beautful pece of furnture on the campus, s to be recondtoned after havng stood slent for years n the old quarters of the socety n the law buldng. Harrs stated that when the work s completed, Wake Forests two socetes should have a par of the most beautful assembly rooms n the South. TEST YOUR NERVES New game book shows FREE! 20 ways to test nerves -all llustrated. Try them on your frendssee f you have healthy nerves yourself. Mal order-blank below wth fronts from 2 packs of Camels. Free book comes postpad. C!J[ (W?fl~ ]~. JT~U"<MA,.,.,., 6UUMA/ H{FJM~tH,.,_ Ca.ML~ NUoU Gl OM TOUl NUVtl! : CLP AND MAL TODAY! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Dept. 76-F. Wnston-Salem, N.C. enclose fronts from 2 packs of Camels. Send me book of nerve tests postpad. Name _. ""(;.;~.;; ~ Street J CtJ ~ oa";-c!;;.-~.,-.-o;;;!;!ts~:sa; L j SMOKE AS MANY AS YOU WANT. THEY NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES! CAMEL CARAVAN wth Caa Loma Orchestra, Stoopnagle and Budd, Conne Boswell, Euery Tuesday ancl Tharday At 9 P.M E.S.T.-8 P.M., C.S.T.-7 P.M., M.S.T.-6 P.M., P.S.T., over WABC-Columba Network

4 PAGE FOUR BARRSTERS CLUB HEARS BROUGHTON Promnent Ralegh Attorney Gves Would-be Lawyers Some Good Advce sut for damages to hs teeth caused by btng down upon a plug of good old Brown Mule or other knd of chewng tobacco. Mr. Broughton, rep resentng the defendant, contended that the loss of the plantffs teeth was not caused by the tobacco but by a dsease of the gums. t was also brought out n the speech that a law yer must be ableo to control hmself n the courtroom n a gentlemanly manner. He stated that t s a detr --- ment to a lawyers practce not to be At a smoker held by the barrsters able to so conduct hmself. club on l{ednesday nght, the mem- After the speech those present en bers had the pleasure of hearng Hon. joyed a round of smokes. J. \. Broughton, promnent Ralegh attorney and alumnus of Wake Forest College. The speaker was ntroduced by Dr. N. Y. Gulley venerable dean of the!a w school. Dr. Gulley pad trbute to the speaker as a great lawyer and Chrstan gentleman. The speaker advsed the members of the club that f they were seekng an easy berth n the law professon they would be dsapponted. He sad that one of the necessary qualtes of a good practcng attorney was physcal stamna. Practce n the courts call for hard work both phys cally and mentally. He also nformed them that t was very necessary for a lawyer to have a very wde range of knowledge and nformaton on all subjects. n the practce of the law a lawyer has to be able to assmlate nformaton on varous subjects very quckly. Mr. Broughton cted an nstance n a case whch he had recently n whch he was called upon for facts concernng the anatomy of the body. The plantff was brngng a MEN ON PUBLCATONS ARE TO BE GVEN KEYS Gold keys wll be gven to the ed tors and to the busness managers of the campus publcatons ths year. Ths dea, whch has been n effect at most other schools, was passed on by the Publcaton Commttee. Keys have been ordered. They wll be made of ten carat gold. On front of each the name of each partcular publcaton and the Wake Forest seal wll appear. On the back of each wll bear the name of the edtor or bus ness manager and the offce he held. Those who wll receve keys ths year are: Ed Schable, edtor of the Ow GOLD AND BL"-CK; Jerry Hamer, busness manager of the OLD Gou AXP BLAcK; Thompson Greenwood, edtor of the Student; Ells Meares, busness manager of the Student; Charle Harrs, edtor of the Hmcle ; and R. F. VanLandngham. busness manager of the H o zolet. l.--d_r. E_dwar_d Who has recently been honored by electon to membershp n the Amercan Socety of Bacterologsts. Detectve Stll Conductng Hunt For Pyromanac (Contnued from page one) and no one wll ever know the truth of the case. Faculty offcals say that the watchng program wll be contnued tmtl commencement although t s possble that t wll be cut to a skeleton durng exam week so as to mpose no hardshp on the fellows who must study for and take exams. S. _Kng--: SUSTARE COMPOSES ORCHESTRA THEME Hensleys Deacons Beng Well Receved Throughout Country; Play n Ralegh Tonght "Blue Star, an orgnal composton by B. A. Sustare. wll be featured n the future as the muscal sgnature of Sam Hensley and hs Deacon Orchestra. Close harmon-y and smoothness of rhythm s characterstc of the num ber, and the dfferent muscal effects as brought out by the bartone tro and soft muted brass have proved most pleasng to those who have lstened n on recent rehearsals. Sustare, n the near future, wll send hs song to Wash ngton to be copyrghted, he stated yesterday. Drected by Cecl Thompson, flashy young maestro who formerly drected hs band at WET, Charlotte, Hensleys Deacons furnshed the musc for the recent Graduaton Ball held n the ballroom of the Sr Walter Hotel, Ralegh, by the nu ses of Rex Hosptal. Many of the medcal students of the Wake Forest Medcal School were nvted, aud the y, along wth many others, expressed tler surprse at the qualty of the program rendered by the orchestra. n addton to ts muscal theme, the Deacons wll feature several novelty numbers tonght when they play at the Ralegh Womans Club for _the Delta Sgma Ch fraternty of Wake Forest. Hensley announced that he wll ntro duce to the publc also for the :lrst tme tonght, none other than Pauly Spencer, known as the "Sngng Trumpeter" when he ove the NBC chan wth several famous bands, ncludng sham Jones and Jan Ga_rber. Cecl Thompson, who has heard Pauly per form on the trumpet, reports that the orchestra s very lucky to obtan hm for ths engagement and promses that hs novel and artstc style of perform ance wll add spce to the program. The personnel of the orchestra ncludes: Cecl Thompson, drector; Sam Hensley and B.. Tart, trumpets; Jack Sawyer, trombone; B. A. Sustart, Woody Pttman and Gerold Debnam, saxes; Nat Thompson, drums;.joe Sawyer, banjo; Luther Modln, pano; Bll Speas, brass; Woody Teague, vocalst; and John Burns, techncan. --L b_ro_r_y_d_o_n_o_t_o n_---.~j? _ The lntest donaton to the Wake :Forest College lbrary s a volume enttled "The Secesson Movement n Vlgna-847 -lssl," by Dr. Henry T. Shanks, the author, vho graduntecl from Wake Forest n 99 and s now roessor of hs tory at Brmngltam-Soutltern Col lege, Alabnma. Dr. Sltankss book ls the frst crtcal study of the subject of secesson n Vrgna. t bas Just come from the press of Garrett am lunssle, Rfeltmond, Va. After obtanng lts degree from Wake Forest, Dr. Shanks, a natve of ranee County, worked out hs ~fster of Arts degree at tle Unl lersty of Chcago, and Doctor of hllosophy degree at the Unvers ty of North Carolna and--columba Unversty. He has been teachng t Blrmnglmm Southern snce "MAKE TOMS YOUR HEADQUARTERS SODAS TOBACCOS SANDWCHES MAGAZNES "MAKE TOMS,yoUR HEADQUARTERS" The clean enter Leaves are the ml des.,.,., " Luckes are all-ways knd to your throat As you can see from ths pcture-luckes tne, smooth qualty doesnt just happen -for we use only the clea2 center leaves! Only the clean center leaves-for whch farmers are pad hgher prces-for the center leaves are the mldest leaves-they taste better. Then-"lts toasted"-for throat protecton. And every Lucky s fully packed wth these choce tobaccosmade round and frm- free from loose ends-thats why Luckes "keep n conclton"- do not dry out. Luckes are always n all-ways knd to your throat. ts toasted: - Luckes are all-ways knd to your throat " " -J ~,,., few. r. Only the Center Leaves-these are the Mldest Leaves, CopJlJ&ht, lll3f, The Amercan Tobao:o C<~mpllllf, sure he sprt, the Then hs Ah, now t wll make quence of n fadng the scene

5 _~a_t_o_n.~l ~~ to the Wake s a volume ~n )!ovement," by Dr. author, vho e Forest n essor of hs outern Col s the frst subject of t has just s of Garrett d, Va. degree from ks, a natve ~rked out hs at te Unl nd Doctor of the Unlversl lnd-{)olnmbfa een teachng the.m snce. ~TERS" CHES ~ZNES ~TERS",.. Wake Forest Wns Two and Loses One on Northern Trp ~ George Washngton Admnsters Lone Defeat, Two Other Games Raned Out BLUE DEVLS DEFEAT DEACONS TUESDAY 2-8 Joe Mulhern Suffers Ankle njury n Game Played at Durham on C~~:h ~e~~:~:s ~.a~::;~~ ~Y~~:~ WALL HOLDS LEAD N BATTNG RACE Four Players Are Over.300 Mark; WaH Has Average of.369 The battng averages of the base- BABY DEACS TAKE THREE VCTORES Durham Hgh, Campbell, and Lousburg Fall Vctms to Freshman Nne ball team were compled ths past ) and Rchmond Unversty hurlers to week by Red Staton, offcal scorer grab two of the three games played on of the team. The :fgures show that tle recent northern trp. Dwght Wall s leadng the Deacons at Gaddy Holds Hampden-Sydney bat wth an average of.369. The only Lousburg College. Wth John Gaddy twrlng eght other two pl~cyers above the three shut-out nnngs and holdng the OP hundred mark are Mlky Gold who s posng batters to three hts, the Dea- httng at a.320 clp, and Jube cons took th~ frst game wth a count Mtchell wth a..327 average. Roy of 4 to. Gark, wth two for three, Myers bas ht for an average of.34 and Wall, wth three bngles n fve but he has not played for the past trps, led the locals at the plate, whl~ month due to an njured band. Gaddy helped put hs own game on lhe Deacons have ht safely 57 ce by drvng out a trple and a sngle tmes n 579 trps to the plate for a _. and turnng back eleven Hampden- team average of.256. Sydney men at the plate. Players averages: Score by nnngs: R. H. E. Wall. ~. 369 Wake Forest Mtchell. 327 Hampden Sydney Gold. 320 Batteres: Gaddy and Allen; Douglas Myers 34 and J. Ogden. Clark. 290 Gaddy Rchmond Unversty Beaten Coach Caddells charges ht hard and often n the thrd frame of ths R~ch mond battle and walked off wth a 5 3 vctory. The freworks started when Gold doubled, Mtchell followed wth a sngle, Wall drove out another double, Clark regstered on an error, \lulhern receved a free pass, and Alexander closed the scorng wth a tmely sngle. Morrs welded the bb bat for Rchmond wth a crcut blow and a sngle. Score by nnngs: R. H E.. Wake Forest ~5 9 Rchmond U Batteres:- Herrng and Allen; Phl, lps, Saunders and Lacy. Lose to George Washngton The bg bats of George Washngton Unversty mxed wth seven Wake Forest errors cost the Deacons a perfect road record. Gaddy, startng moundsman, was touched for sx talles n the ntal frame when Crans, battng frst for Washngton, took a pass, Russell followed wth a sngle, ZOhn lned out another one-bagger, Ftzgerald took frst on an error, Albert ht for one bag,.and Bornba topped the spree off wth a homer. Gaddy was releved by Herrng, who later n the game turned the mound dutes over to Boyles. Score by nnngs: R. H. E. >o; Wake Forest _ l G. Washngton x-2 0 Batteres: Gaddy, Herrng, Boyles, and.allen ; Rhnehart; Sernenes and Bornba. Mulhern. 274 Allen 268 Partn. 260 Rnehart. 200 Pa,tton. :. 94 Alexander Slayton Herrng DEVlS OUTSLUG DEACONS -BY 2-8 Wake Forest Hops on Flohr for Nne Base Hts; Mulhern njured n Game Wake Forest and Duke base runners made a merry tme of t as the Blue Devls hammered out a 2-8 decson over the Deacons n the Durham park last Tuesday. Nether team had any bg nnngs, but consstently drove n runs n practcally every frame. Wake Forest Opens The Deacons opened the scorng n the second round and later pushed over another marker n the thrd, but Coach Coombs crew crossed the plate four tmes n the last of the thrd to take the lead that was never reganed. "Mlky" Gold and Frank Clark set the pact at the plate for the Deacons, each httng out a homer, a. sngle, and drvng n two runs. "Corky" RHODES AND JOHNSON. PTCH EASY VCTORES Followng the Deacons. By A. D. CON A new sports column, a new wrter and a new deal n sports wrteups. We hope you lke us. Our baseball teams northern trp would have been a bg success but for old Jupe Pluvus and those George Washngton gentlemen. The boys brought back glowng tales about our natons captal. They also brought back the report that George Washngton expects ther football game wth wake Forest next year to be a setup. Frosh Have Lost Only Two Games What about t Deacons? And Are Undefeated n Coach Berner of the Hampden- Bg Fve Sdney team was the most belgerant coach the Deacons have met n many a day. When he brought hs team here The Baby Deacons baseball team to play the frst thng he dd was to contnued ts mpressve play n the become suspcous of our brand of last three games by bowlng over baseball. (They probably dont ht Durham Hgh, Campbell College, and that hard n Vrgna). He asked for pnch runners three tmes durng the game, and fnally shfted hs team John Leary and McClenny dvded around n the mddle of the last nnng the mound assgnment n the game nearly makng a crcus of the game. wth Durham Hgh. They were gven Have you ever notced Coach Johns poor support afeld and were barely habt of lghtng a cgarette at the able to notch a 7-6 wn. start of the last nnng of each game? And wkat has happened to the base Campbell College was the next vc ball bellowngs of Fatty Stevens? Old PAGE FVE Wake Forest Net Men Blank Gulford H~re Monday BLUE MPS DOWN FROSH NET TEAM mps Dd Not Relnqush a Sngle Set; Tuttle Loses Challenge - to Wlkns Wn All Nne Matches Wthout the Loss of a Sngle Set PLAY STATE COLLEGE N LAST MATCH MONDAY Deacons OutdGne By Devls and Roanoke; Dcknson Plays Well The Wake Forest freshmen tenns --- team nvaded the Duke team Wednes- Wnnng all nne matches wthout day and were turned down for the the loss of a set, the Deacon racket second tme by the Blue mps, 9-0. men easly vanqushed the Gulford The Baby Deacons were unable to ob- College tenns team here Wednesday, tan a sngle set from ther opponents. for the second vcto~- over the Gull- The summary: ford boys. Copeland playng No. Sngles: Verstraten defeated Tuttle, for Gulford caused Cal Dcknson, top 6, 6-4; Gll defeated Tate, 6-0, 6-3; man for Wake Forest, to go to 7-5 two sets. Belk defeated McCall, 6-0, 6 2; Gns burg defeated Cahoon, 6 0, 6-; Ashbey The results: Dcknson defeated defeated Stroupe, 6-3, 6-3. Copeland, 7-5, 7-5; Fletcher defeated tme of the fast travellng freshman age s slewng you on the draw, Doubles: Verstraten and Gll won Brown, 6-3, 6-4; Josey defeated club. Wth Braxton Rhodes ptchng Fatty! Former Deacons are dong Weaver, 6-4, 6-4; Collns bested Newover Tuttle and Stroupe, 6-4, 6-3; and the Baby Deacs jumped to an early ther bt n pro baseball. June Ramsey and Ash bey defeated McCall man, 6-0, 6-2; Davs defeated Werner, lead and then coasted along to an easy Barnes, last years hero, s the ace and Tate, 6-2, 6 _4. 6 2, 6-; and Owens beat Ward, 6-2, 8-3 vctory. Rhodes was n no danger southpaw of the W!lmngton Prates. Johnne Hcks has sgned wth the Tuttle challengng Captan Wlkns 6-4 at any tme. He set the losers down Charlotte Hornest and wll report after for the No. poston last week lost n the doubles, Hanson and Josey wth monotonous regularty and kept school closes. Howard Earp travels n a gruellng fve set match, 6 3, -6, defeated Copeland and Brown, 6-0, 6-0; ther few hts well scattered. Meanwhle, wth Jake Lews leadng the to Rchmond, Vrgna every week-end 6 _, 4 6, 6 _ 4. Hutchns and Owens defeated Ward to play shortstop for the Colts. Two and Weaver, 6-0, 6-3; and Dcknson attack, the Baptsts were httng Jones weeks ago Howard had sx hts n n every nnng to roll up eght runs. ten tmes at bat n two games. WAKE FOREST PREPARNG FOR and Collns defeated Newman and Ths was "the second tme ths year Another s Monk Joyner who s httng Werner, 6-0, 6-3. CENTENNAL COMMENCEMENT that the Campbell boys have been defeated by the frosh. Southern Assocaton. Vc Sorrell, our t the ball hard for Nashvlle of the The Deacon netters lost two encounters last week, to Duke and to (Contnued from page one), Last Tuesday the yearlngs travelled Roanoke College. The Blue Devls bg league representatve, has turned to Lousburg and avenged an early n some nce mou,nd performances for duplcated ther vctory earler n the season defeat by gvng Lousburg an season, relnqushng only one set, that the Detrot Tgers so far ths sprng. 8-3 beatng. Doug Johnson was on the Good luck to you, boys! n the sngles. Cal Dcknson played bll for the Baby Deacs. He hurled a. Our frosh team s complng qute a fne brand of tenns aganst Barney fne game allowng only :fve hts and Welsh of Duke almost wnnng the fannng ffteen. Wth men on base Lousburg was helpless before Johnsons slants. The Baby Deacons collected a dozen hts to gve Johnson a comfortable lead to work behnd. The Lousburg left felder robbed the freshmen of qute a few more hts wth some great catches. The Wake Forest freshmen now have a season record of fourteen wns and two defeats. The only team that they have not defeated s Oak Rdge who holds a 5-0 vctory over them. The Baby Deacs have yet to taste defeat n a Bg Fve game. DEACON TRACKERS SWAMP GULFORD Deacons Amass a Total of 9 Ponts Aganst Gulfords 35 Ponts ART AND POTATOES ~:;::)~!~: ~e~t!h~r!!~;~~~.at bat byj LEONARD RUNS MLE N Flohr Tonehed Oten RECORD BREAKNG TME (Contnued from page two) few preparatons as we expected to come back by nghtfall; however, my frend took especal pans to see that he was well fortfed wth food before leavng-he told me that.he "guessed hed take along some matches and a few potatoes and eggs, and cook a lttle snack when we arrved"; was alm~t besde myself-how could a real artst, one who had dsplayed the talents my frend had, be so oblvous to soul fllng beauty, and thnk only of hs stomach! con taned my nward dsgust and sad nothng though, and we started on our way The spot wasnt very far, but ts locaton had made t naccesble un> tl the day stumbled on the new route. t was smply a matter of gong around behnd the mountan and followng a gorge whch led nto a sort of natural pathway up the sde of the hll. t ddnt take us long to reach the top, but we bad oeen so late n startng that the sun had al most set when we clmbed to the hghest place. had planned t thus. wantel hm to get there when the scene below was n ts glory. Coach Caddells men hopped on the delvery of Mort Flohr, who had pre- Eleven Mnutes and Eleven Seevously set the Deacons down n a par of games, for nne bts-the most any onds; Betters Former Record team has regstered n one contest. By Nne Seconds Gaddy started on the mound for Wake Forest, but was releved by Herrng after the second round. Both fngers offered up an even dozen hts to the Methodsts, Gaddy beng touched for four and Herrng allowng eght. Joe Mulhern, ace outer gardener, was forced from the game wth an njured ankle after lnng out a double n the second nnng. He was releved by Alexander who connected for a ht n the four trps. Box Score: Wake Forest Ab. R. B. 0. A. E. Slayton, rf Gold, 3b Partn, 3b Mtchell, ss Wall, cf Clark, 2b Mulhern, lf Alexander, f Patton, b Rhnehart, c Gaddy, p Herrng, p f anythng, todays sunset was Totals more g or ous th an th e one h a d wt Duk Ab R H 0 E nessed the day before. was thrlled e a. agan-greatly thrlled-and felt Bell, 2 b that my frend would be too. When Huskamp, rf fnally drew my eyes away from the :::~:::~r. ~ :::::::::::::::: ; ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ wonder and majesty below, fxed Cornelus, cf them on hm. wanted to notce Mtchell, ss o 2 o carefully hs reacton. Thompson, lf 4 o 2 o o 0 For a long tme he was slent. He Hendrckson, 3b 4 o o 3 0 sad nothng, but slowly got off hs Flohr, p 4 2 o horse and looked about hm. He then looked out across the space, and down nto the valley below. Hs face took on an unusual expresson--one that had never seen there before; was sure he was begnnng to catch the sprt, the beauty that lay about hm. Then hs lps began to frame words. Ah, now t s comng, thought. He wll make some remark about the elo quence of nature-about ts grandeur n fadng sunlght. He wll capture the scene and put t on canvas. nave won, thought. Then be spoke. "Hell," he sad, " forgot the pota toes." Totals.: Score by nnngs: R. Wake Forest Duke x-2 Runs ba.tted n: Slayton 2, Gold 2, Cla;rk 2, Mulhern, Bell, Huskamp, Wagner 3, Cornelus 3, Mchael 2, Thompson 2. Two base hts: Mulhern, Thompson. Three base bts: Mchael, Cornelus 2. Home runs: Gold, Clark, Bell. Stolen bases: Bell 2, HUskamp, Wagner, Thompson 2. Double plays: Clark, Mtchell and Patton: Mchael, Bell and Weaver. Bases on balls: off Gaddy 2, Herrng 3, Flohr 5. Struck Wake Forests track team pled up a total of 9 ponts aganst Gulfords 35 last Saturday to down the Quakers n the openng meet of the season. The outstandng performance of the day was B. G. Leonards record break ng two mle run. Hs tme was eleven mnutes and eleven seconds, to better the former record by nne seconds, whch Kllough made aganst Rchmond U. n ncdentally, Kllough fn shed thrd n the two mle event last Saturday. n the mle,run Dent Weatherman and Drake, both of Wake Forest, staged a thrllng race whch ended wth Weatherman holdng a lead of but a few nches over Drake. Weathermans tme for ths event was fve mnutes and three-ffths seconds. n amassng a total of nnety-one ponts, the Deacons scored ten frsts, nne seconds and eght thrds to show surprsng strength n ther ntal engagement. Both the varsty and freshman teams have been practcng daly at Gore Feld. Coach Phl Utley sad that the teams smashng vctory.over Gulford was qute encouragng, and that he s expectng a successful season for the team. Yesterday the frosh and varsty squads met the Unversty of Rchmond on the latters feld. As the meet was not over when the Or.n GoLD AND BLACK went to pres!j the results were not avalable to be PJnted. The varsty wll contnue fron Rchmond to Washngton, where taey wll engage Catholc Unversty on Monday. Due tc> ther showng aganst Gulford the hopes ot the Deacon followers have rsen much hgher, and a very good season s now predcted by many. out: by Herrng 5, Flohr 9. Left on bases: Wake Forest 7. Duke 6. Passed balls: Rhnehart 2, Wagner. Hts: off Gaddy 4 n 2 nnngs; Herrng 8 n 6. Losng ptcher: Gaddy. Umpres: Felds and Vckers. Tme: :58. a strng of vctores ths year. Too bad they had to lose at all. Snce the other freshman teams are below par ths year we predct some good base ball years just ahead for Wake Forest. Dukes baseball team fnshed up a hghly credtable trp n the North de featng such teams as Prnceton, Temple, and a few other large schools. Trps lke that focus attenton on North Carolna baseball. Say, what about the new gym for next year? All ths talk about football and baseball for next year, but what about poor old basketball?.after all t s one of our sports. Cannon Balls A baseball fan from Ayden told us that Dwght Wall went for weeks ~ last summer wthout shavng Joe Mulhern would be a terror to rooke umpres.... Hack Malloy studes so hard at nght that he has to wear colored glasses n the day tme.... Have you ever heard the Edens brothers remnscng about the good ol days n Texas?. Lefty Dean would look mghty good n a Deacon unform next year. We hear that Ws battery mate at Oak Rdge, Sandy Peel, has already decded to come here.... Doug Johnsons annual ht aganst Carolna was one of the longest hts ever seen on Gore Feld. F. Hoge of New York Cty. Mr. Wllam Conrad, presdent of the Alumn Assocaton wll presde at ths sesson, durng whch. talks of not more than ten mnutes wll be gven n the followng order:. The Mnstry-Dr. Oscar Haywood, New Bern, N. C. 2. LawYers, Offcers of the State and Naton-Hon. J. M. Broughton, Ralegh, N. C. 3. Physcans - Dr. Hubert A. Royster, Ralegh, N. C. 4. Educaton, Authors and Edtors Mr. Stanford Martn, Wnston-Salem, N.C. 5. Non-Professonal Alumn - Mr. T. E. Browne, Ralegh, N. C. The concludng parts of the program wll blegn at 0:30 Thursday mornng wth the commencement exercses at whch Dr. Ktchn, presdent of the college wll presde. Dr. E. W. Skes, presdent of Clemson College, South Carolna, wll delver the commencement address. Followng.ths the graduatng exercses wll take place; then the Baccalaureate address wll be delveroo by Dr. Ktchn, the meetng wll close wth a prayer by Rev. J. B. Weatherspoon of Lousvlle, Ky. second second. Cals cannon ball serve caused hm to wn hs serve four straght tmes n the last set. The summary: Welch defeated Dcknson, 6-2, 7 5; Hggns won over Hanson, 6-0, 7-5; Kenyon defeated Fletcher, 6-, 6-3; Martn won over Hutchns, 6-3, 6-4; Morefeld over Josey, 6-, 6-0; McNel defeated Collns, 6-2, 6-3. Doubles-Welsh and Hggns defeated Hanson and Josey, 6 0, 6-2; Denyon and Martn defeated Hutchns and Fletcher, 6-3, 6-2; Morefeld and McNell defeated Dcknson and Collns, 6-4, 4-6, 6-. The Roanoke College netters from Vrgna completed ther North Caro Una swng by defeatng the Deacs sx to two. Josey won hs sngles ma.tch and Fletcher and Dcknson won out n the doubles to account for the wns. Probably the last tenns meet of the year wll come on Monday when the Deacons meet the State College aggregaton here Monday. -_;_D O_O D_O_~-0-~--~ -~~..~ FOOTBALL PRACTCE THROUGH FOR YEAR Due to a change n the examnaton schedule footoall drlls have been called off for the rest of the year. Coach Jm Weaver was reluctant to stop the daly workouts, but he felt that the boys would have lttle tme to prepare for the comng tests f they found t necessary to report for practce every afternoon. He stated that he would rather sacrfce two weeks practce nqw than to have any of hs players be confronted wth scholastc dffcultes next year. Wth a large squad returnng next fall deacon followers hold hgh hopes for one of the best teams to represent Wake Forest n many years. EDWARDS & BROUGHTON CO. PRNTERS LTHOGRAPHERS STATONERS RALEGH, NORTH CAROLNA TEX EDENS ALLOWED.! TO LEAVE HOSPTAL e - Tex Edens. verstle fresbma.n athlete,. left the nfrmary ths week where he had been confned for more than a week wth an nflamed throat. Although he has lost qute a bt of weght Tex stated that he-s now feelng much better. He rejoned the Baby Deacs at baseball practce last Wednesday, and reports ndcate that he s httng the ball as hard as ever. Sunday Amusements Draw Ashevlle.-t was estmated that 6,000 persons attended movng pcture performances and baseball games here last Sunday, the frst on whch these amusements and sports were legal n ths cty. Sunday sports and moves recently were legalzed by an ordnance passed by the cty councl. BULLETN Dnke defeated Wake Forest Thursday afternoon by the seore of to. Thompson led the llttng attack for Duke wth three bts. Clark, Mulhern, and Herrng were the bg guns for the Deacons. ~!t_c_j_-~-~~-0-,_. C_Q_D_ -!f.

6 . : PAGE SX Cvl Works Admstraton. ~.. ~. -.. Dong Much G.oQd on Campus Fo:ty Men_ at Wake Forest Help-.WAKE FOREST STUDENT mg Hollday on mprovement BODY OFFCERS FOR of Grounds NEARLY FVE THOUSAND DOLLARS PAD WORKERS s Not Known How Long College Wll Be Kept On Lst Eghty-seven men are now employed n CWA work. The work began about the mddle of February and wll contnue untll the end of May, so far as the college offcals know now. Correspondence s beng carred on wth the authortes n Washngton. Dean Bryan stated Tuesday that the college expected to know wthn a short tme whether Wake Forest wll be dropped from the lst of colleges recevng tbs ad at the close of ths month, or f the funds wll be receved untl the end ot May. The college allotment per month s $,505. Up to the mddle of Aprl the college had receved approxmately $4, Ths amount has been dstrbuted to boys who sought to help ther par ents or guardans pay college expenses. Each boy employed receved $5 a month n a government check. A large amount of ths money has oeen used to pay fees. About 50 per cent of the men are employed n departmental work. Sev eral are employed n the college J. brary. Those departmental work are OL~ ~OLD AND BLACK TAR HEELS BUYNG.at?.anst,225 durng the st~lar p~qd Schedule of Examnatons MORE A~TQMQBLES 0~ 933. Passenger car Blle~ UJP,~ J.-.; l. from 6,09 to,532. The Aprl sales MAY 2-26 MORNNG 9:00-2:00 AFTERNOON 2:00-5:00 All classes meetng 6th hr. Mon., May 2. All classes m.eetng st hr. Tues. All classes meetng st hr. Mon., Mas 22. All classes meetng 3rd hr. Tues. All classes meetng 2nd hr. Tues., May 23. All classes r:eetl]g 3,rd hr. Mon..All classes meetng 5th hr. Mon., May 24. All classes meetng 2nd hr. Mon. All classes meetng 5th hr. Tues., May 25. All classes meetng 4th hr. Tues. All classes meetng 4th hr. Mon., May 26. All classes meetng 6th hr. Tues. Presdent of Student Councl states that follow.ng rules wll apply as to examnatons.. All exams. on quz pads. 2. No books or notes can be carred to classroom. 3. A wrtten pledge must be s;ned at end of paper. Student Connell Presdent, Herman Stevens; Vce Presdent, Pat Swan; Secretary, Charl.es Russell; Educaton Department Representatve, John Markham; Mnsteral Department Representatve, E. C. Chamblee; Law Depart ddates. Thngs that wll be taken nto consderaton wll be the students ment Representatve, Malcolm Paul; language CROUP scholastc ablty, hs character, hs Medcal Department Representatve, ablty n the lne of publcaton J. E. Wrght; Senor Class Representatve, Junus Howell; Senor Class MEETS AT STATE work, and hs famlarty wth the publcaton for whch he s a canddate. Ths process wll elmnate Representatve, Davd Dowd; Senor Class Representatve, C.. Harrs; Natonal Conventon of Sgma P any person from runnng who s not Junor Class Representatve, Marcus Alpha Met at State Last capable of holdng the offce. When Floyd; Junor Class Representatve, Saturday nomnatons take place tls board Red Staton; Junor Class Representatve, Charles Welfare; Sophomore The natonal conventon of Sgma. P wll announce the names of those who Class Representatve, Charles Dunn. Student Legslature Presdent, W. C. Thomas; Educaton Department Representatve, J. B. Brower; Mnsteral Department Representatve, J. J. Martn; Law Department Representatve, Rchard, England; Medcal Department Represent atve, C. N. Feezor; Senor Class Representatve, Vernon W. Taylor; Senor Class Representatve, B.. Tart; Junor Class Representatve, Dent Weatherman; Junor Class Representatve, C. H. Trueblood; JUnor Class Representatve, Vernon L. Vverette; Sophomore Class Representatve, Bert Shore. actng as assstants ~ Englsh, Hstory, Relgon and smlar courses of The Old Gold and Black nstructon. Edtor, Thompson Greenwood; Bus! ness Manager, Waldo Cheek. The Studtmt Edtor, Frank Norrs; Busness Manager, Ells Mearl. The Superntendent of the grounds, Mr. W. D. Holday, has now under hm forty CWA workers. Thrty-fve of these men are nght watchmen, pa.trolng the grounds every few mnutes, and to ncrease the effcency of ths work, beds have been provded n the prncpal buldngs for these watchmen. The CWA men have been dong much for the mprovement of the campus. Trees have been pruned, walks repared, and leaves raked up. Among the students whch appled for work, there were found many carpenters, panters, and electrcans. These men have been set to work n the buldngs. The rooms of the Englsh department n the Alumn Buldng have been under repars for several weeks. Two of them have been completely remodeled. EUZElANS PCK BROWN FOR HEAD Copple Elected Vce Presdent; Lambert Re-elected Treasurer for Nexf Year n one of the longest busness sessons of the year, the Euzelan lter ary socety elecfed ts offcers for the comng term. The whole program was full of petty and laughable dscussons n whch a hgh sprt of goodwll spced the serousness of the occason. Mllard Brown, n the race for the presdentshp for next year, defeated George Grffn and John Lambert. Brown, who wll be a senor next year, has been a member of the socety for the entre length of hs stay here, and has held several mportant offces. George Copple, who wll be a sophomore next year and who has ds tngushed hmself ths year n ntercollegate debatng, was chosen by acclamaton to be vce presdent. A three-cornered race was staged for the poston of secretary between John Lambert, Ed Beale, and Falk Johnson. The latter came out of the bg end of the horn. John Lambert, who had served successfully n the responsble offce of treasurer for the past Grm, was unanmously reelected. A n o t h e r trpled-sded fght came off n the dash for the censors char as Robert Campbell, Olln Owens, and Percval Perry had ther hats thrown n the rng. Owens receved the offce. The other offcers chosen were: Ed Chamblee, chaplan; Robert Ca.mpbel, reporter: Chevs Horne, sexton; and Charles U. Harrs, Jr., the retrng presdent automatcally became sergeant-at-arms. As the centennal commencement marshals are chosen by the two socetes and the Euzelans selected as ther quota George Grffn, chef, wth Olln Owens and Ed Chamblee to cooperate. Ffty-sx Feet, Fve nches! Hammond, La., May 0.-(UP) Jack Torrance, the man mountan from Lousana State Unversty, brgke hs own worlds record unoflclally today when he put the shot 56 feet, 5 nches n an exhbton at Southeastern College here, Alpha, language fraternty w. as held have been passed by the board and at State College l~st Saturday. who wll automatcally become nom The meetng was called to order nees for ther partcular offces. No and the welcome address delvered by nomnatons wll be taken from the Dr. L. E. Hnkle, natonal presdent of the fraternty. The welcome by the local chapter was gven by M.. Annetta, presdent. Followng these welcomes a nomnatng commttee was apponted for the electon of natonal offcers, the reports of the chapters presented, ntroducton of new busness brought up, the report of the nomnatng commttee and the electon of offcers. The delegates after adjournment were honored at a recepton at the home of Prof. and Mrs. Hnkle. The rtual and formal ntaton preceded a dance whch was gven at 0 p.m. PUBLCATONS TO ESTABLSH BOARD The Howler (Contnued from page one) Edtor, Howard Rollns; Busness ceved the board wll meet, dscuss, Manager, Thomas E. ForM s. and decde the elgblty of the can- the c;ga.-ette thats MLDER foor for these sx postons. Ed Schable, retrng edtor of the OLD GoLD AND B;LAOB:, proposed the plan for a publcaton board earler n the year, but no acton was taken to esta,blsh one untl Herman Stevens, present presdent of the study body, returned from the annual meetng of the North Carolna Confederaon of Stuq.ents, where camp,ub publ~catons was one of the matters dscussed. On returnng from ths meetng, he had a meetng of the old edtors and those nterested n the future of our cam pus publcatons. There the petton for formng such a board was made. Wake Forest wll be the last large school n the state to estatlsh such a board. At other schools ths board has been a great ad to ther campus publcatons. the cgarette that TASTES BETTER were the greatest snce September, fheres been f lot of talk n recent 929, la.!lt!ear of th~ boom perod. months of reducng the cost of lcenses to operate ~utoj!~obles over the splendd hghways of North Carollna, but latent n ev~y l;l!lman ~e gven ~ tp.-u The yearnng for adventure that s the fact that nothng has been done n ng!;!xpresson n "Tarzan and Hs that dre.ctlon ha.snt deterred Tar Mate,; jungle. flm -contnung the experences of Johnny Wessmuller and Heels from buyng new cars n large numbers. The Aprl report of the Motor Vehcle Bureau of the State Department The new adventure thrller wll play Maureen OSullvan n Dark!lst Afrca.!r of Revenue, recently made publc, at the Palace Theatre all ths week. shows that durng that month dealers Almost from the frst scene there throughout the state sold 4,950 passenger cars, an ncrease of more than s a ser~s of "punch" ncdents to 3,000 above the sales reported durng capture aud.ence nterest. Struggles Aprl of last year, when only,60 between man and beast on land n the were sold. Only 2,980 were dsposed of n March of ths year. Trucks sold n Aprl numbered,- 64, compared wth but 394 last Aprl, and 5S2 n March, 934. The number of truc~s sold durng the frst four months of ths year was 3,287, as ~a~er are blende4 nto one of the :q:~ost powerful dramas of conflct ever screened. A cartoon, "The Pa.rade of the Wooden Solders" and Palace Sound News completes the progr~. PROGRAM Castle Theatre. WEEK MAY 4, 934 ll!onda.y-tuesday PAT PATTERSON JOHN BOLES SPENCER. TRACY n "BOTTOMS up" The muscal roma.nee wth a real lc.ve story that yon wll enjoy l!gll! COMEDY COMEDY Wednesday la.y ROBSON JEAN PAB:ta:B. --tn-- You Can-t Buy Everythng" WHEN DO WB EATl Tbursda.y RCRAB.D ARLEN n CABZOON "COME ON MARNES" PATHE NBWS xrarora :rrtda.y JEAN PARKER RO:Bl. YOCNG. --ln-.- LAZY RVER" Fr:lda.y ll!ddl.te-saturda.y A.l!ll. Do~B F~~B ~l - CoU~n llloorc. --n ~~~uc;cess ~T ~NY P~CE" po~~y CABTOON ~t~y :KANE l.cbmond. b :. ~QEVL TG~~~~.:_: COMNG :- ONLY YESTERDAY.. GLAMPUR ~.RP TD~ ROMAN SCANDALS. DEATH TAK~$ A.-.oLPAY theg age good grapes to make rare wnes and they do somethng lke that to mellow good tobaccos W HERE THE RARE WNES come from they know that the two most pj.portant thngs n wne-makng are the selecton of the grapes and the long years of ageng n the wne cellars. TS VERY MUCH THE SAM~ n the makng of a cg~ette. Yo~ h~ve to get the rght tobaccos, then put them away to ~ge and meuow Q. wooden casks. You cant make a good cgarette lke Chesterfeld n a d~y. t takes over two years to age the toj>accos for your Chesterfelds---but t adds somethns to the taste and ~es them mlder. Everythrv; that modem Scence r~lly knows about s used ~ fujke ChestefjWld the cgl:re~ thats m«jer, the cgatette that tastes better. ",,, ~./. Ln~ Coordn. College N and Vol. XV. l V ntej o:--byhoj Wth ths sese presdent ~m"lr frst year as pr~ hs sxty-second tered here as a words, "Thats snt t?" When he frst buldng house~ There were abot members of th graduatng class wth hm. Thex of the faculty, bers over 800, graduate ths Bl the college ncll a modern heatn "Dr. Blly," a played a most growth, for dur: as presdent h~ buldngs grow ncrease n the an 8:dvance jn $500,000 to $3,0 panded from $20,000; an $82,0G<t canceled ardzed and me partment. " should say, stated n an n look back on standardzaton. chef contrbut ment, entrance sala:rell, and, n class." Along wth m lege also advan one way or an tnued, "howeve Forest has com }lrogressve m wth modern of scence.". But Dr. PotE words to statst hs remnscenc he ndulged n J "Every man knew everybod when we came each others nee We had no fntel we played marl. member that mathematcs,, ng a match ga of the buldng. a c~ptal ma:rbl "As for our grand tmes ox senor speaknl day they atten vllage was sm; few n numberdozen. But the n the sqcety halls runnng fl ng to the other and n the md the snk. wh three steps gol low took hls gl about ready to ~ engaged. "They tell a grl sttng n (Please t Ffty Ha was nform up a newspape of the Wake Fe edtor says, ": artcle must no contan all th :ffty-two years stence." t s te trck of an reporter somet mprovements -campus. Put t and have t r alas, am asl volumes (that of the Btu.d.ent f t nto a news After many over the must: room, have s the fotlowng the StU<Jent. The Wake F debut n 882. sponsored by tl -;-.,. clety, but n :P.

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