spaggi vail - san jose state university

4
rig Up 0 !SfS Offered by f Santa Clare ,utenant Frank ns office* Gad lard. reported that of San Jose tate who had the examina- V receive word they paasKi final re-cheek. POINTMENT the examina- eceiee a flying Which includes, nths’ lornia primary Randolph and nant Kurtz said. years’ college tion from Kelly dor receives a commission ic rve with $245 ’bile on active the cadet re ,nth, according relations ofil- GROUPS it. Lieutenant ieveral college i‘AA students, 4s, Spartan Hall, Gamma ’embers of the BELLA FE OF TEA sta near Sara en this year as al YWCA Wive the College ’1’ !eh will be held n from 3 to 6 ti will be given k Includes the vocal selections ris, mezzo so- I on the plane folk dance iris dressed in -rs; and origing Leila Gulmert tea will be the !mbers who are the Advisor: :e Bryant Miss Helen Dimmics ison, president- ext year. JSE AT CLUB oil have eft" ouse on South net to the Cl miter this eve. Irding to Red’ rgaret O’Keefa. to music fur. ; recording as- may anIUSe s or billiards. TERM tLY rap coLLcod causal giAciiisigcto ezeiroito IS SAL. 4311 11001. E SOT V(IIV TIO"warairar." Yell Leader _21(760 ColLege___ Tryout Assembly VOL. XXVIII. Spaggi Tomorrow Vail SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, ’WEDNESDAY, MAY IS, 1940 Juniors Follow Seniors North Number 14 Seniors Sneak, Juniors Give Chase FOUR IN RACE FOR PRESIDENCY Located YELL LEADER Last Night; ASPIRANTS Move MEET TODAY Expected Candidates FACTS FROM Speak Before FRONT GIVEN Assembly BY JUNIORS Tomorrow Four members of the newly. elected seven -man student council will be candidates for the student body president’s office in the Fri- day elections as two more, Al Aiton and Stanley Murdock, an- nounced that they would enter the race yesterday. ASSEMBLY TOMORROW In an attempt to inject pre-elec- bon enthusiasm into the student body, Van Vleck and members of his campaign committee yesterday organized an assembly to be held at 12 o’clock tomorrow noon where candidates for the ASSC offices will discuss their platforms before students in conjunction with yell leader tryouts. Van Vleck said that the mem- bers of the new council were work. CI together on the assembly and that Stanley Murdock and Al Aiton, candidates for the presi- dency, and Verne Williams, candi- date for the vice-presidency, had indicated their complete desire to take an active part in the proceedings. George Jorgen- sen, who will also run for the presi- dency, and Bob Payne, candidate for the vice-presidency, could not be reached yesterday. Senior Propaganda Shown As False LATEST WAR BULLETIN From Junior Headquarters.Contrary to conflicting reports from the propa- ganda bureau of the senior class that 500 juniors had been either kidnapped or chased into hiding on Monday night were proven false when final tabulation on all seniors taken into the hills was made. BLITZKRIEG The junior’s blitzkrieg campaign, attempting to cope with senior strategy led by Barney Murphy and Ralph Kelley, was thrown into high gear Monday night which resulted in the capture of thirty seniors and complete demoralization. Senior Class President Barney Murphy was the first to feet the effects of the army tactics of the juniors. Early yesterday morning Murphy was seized by the juniors. Playing on the sympathies of the soft-hearted third -year men with his plea for mercy that he was In Chamber Music CONCERT Given Friday Jean Brier, violinist, and Jean Crouch, violoncellist, will be fea- tured soloists at Friday night’s annual Evening of Chamber Music, presented by the chamber music division of the college Music de- partment, opening at 8:15 In the Little Theater. Five string quartets will open the program with a Bach Chorale Prelude. In contrast, the ultra- modern school will be represented by the second string quartet of Arnold Schonberg, professor of music theory at UCLA, and by a one -minute canon by the French modernist, Honegger. Closing number of the program will be the concerto for four vio- lins by Ludwig Maurer. Twenty- six violins will be used for this number, with four solo violins for the cadenza. One movement of Baccheren’s concerto for violoncello will be played, with string quartet ac- companiment. Miss Crouch will play the solo. There will be no charge for ad- mission, and students, faculty and public are invited, Miss Robinson announces. no condition to walk home from a s long trip, Murphy was allowed to lath Tull Moon’ go free. ENTERTAINMENT Others to feel the devastating Dance Given work of the juniors were Bill On the assembly program, en- bis orchestra, and Revelries stars Icy and Ed Grant. Senior Sneak Saturday Night rtainment by Lowell Jones and Lukenbill, Bill Gurnea, Hugh Sta- te Mae Zimmerman, 13111 Kidwell, and Week Chairman Ralph Kelley went Jack Harcourt will be featured. into hiding immediately after the Following final tabulation of Mixer and did not show up until otes on the color change Monday, classes yesterday. .ouncilmen said that another Juniors are asked to lose no time test" vote would be taken Friday in assembling the minute word is o discover which of a number or received that the seniors have Possible color combinations stu- sneaked, stated Sneak Week Chair- ents favored. man Frank Bonanno. POWER FELT FIRST JUNIOR FOLLOWS SENIORS --SWAMPED I I By HARRY GRAHAM "It’s a lngg story!" All I could Five was a blanket, crouched ever a steaming foot -bath, but I surmised that Gerald Van Snort, tent Junior to follow the seniors, WWI somewhere inside. "Yessir, I Kodd this cold waitigg for the seddlors we tried to figure out tat Where they would go tedel tiiiiially wwd up id a swamp!" He blew his nose. "About four o’clock this mordigg, subboddy Powded on by door and said Hey you, the seddiors are steeking. So flodd iddoo a pair of padds and went outside. I met sub awful dice guys, odly I coulditt recogdize theb. "rheY said We are judicirs. kindly follow us add we will be the 45t to fhb: the seddiors." Ile drew the blanket closer. "We rode add "Ode, Nit we chitin seeli to be lookigg for anything, until cme of theh said Here we are! They poitedd out is path to bp add said The aeildiors are ;limit there go get ’eh! That’s when I godd iddoo the swamp!" lip caughed. "You dough subthigg 7" Gerald disappeared into the depths of SC Alka-Seltzer. "I dod thigg theb dab seddiors are gawda steek!" With bids going fast, members of the Alpha PI Omega fraternity are making final plans for their sixth annual "Full Moon" dance this Saturday night at Castlewood Country club. Directions for reaching Castle- wood Country club will be posted in full on the main bulletin board either today or tomorrow, Ben Johnson. chairman, announced yes- terday. Music for the affair is being furnished by Joaquin Gill and his orchestra, featuring the vocal re- frains of Miss Jane Churchill. Gill Is presented through the manage- ment of the Music Corporation of America and has played for many dances at University of California, and also for affairs in San Fran- cisco. The scene of the dance, Castle- wood Country club, is the former million -dollar estate of Mrs. Phoe- be Hearst, and the APO affair will be the final open function given at the club as it will he turned into a dude ranch after June 1. Bids may be purchased from zany member of the fraternity or from the Controller’s office for $1.25 Taylor Announces Candidacy For Post; Tryouts Tomorrow Aspirants to three college yell leaders positions open next quarter will meet today at 4 o’clock in the Morris Dailey auditorium. The new Spartan rooting section leaders will he named Friday in the council run-off’s. TAYLOR CANDIDATE With a number of students re- ported ready to run for the posts, Tom Taylor, one of the three yell leaders of this year, was yesterday the first to announce his candi- dacy. Taylor said he would be a candidate for the head yell lead- ership. TRYOUTS TOMORROW Yell leader tryouts before the student body, preliminary to Fri- day’s ballotting, will be held to- morrow at 11:00 or 12 o’clock in the Morris Dailey auditorium. Don True, head of the rally committee, who is scheduled to handle arrange- ments had not yet indicated a defi- nite time for the tryouts yesterday. Both Jim Fahn and Bob Swan- son, other members of the yell leader trio of thls year, will not run again for the posts. President Overworks; Told To ’Take It Easy’ "You’re going too hard," the doctor told him. "Take it easy for a while." So President T. W. MacQuarrie is resting at his home for the next week or ten days, explaining his absence recently from the college. Nothing serious, according to the doctor. A little relaxation will fax him up. BULLETIN: Junior Sneak Week Chairman Frank Bonanno reported at 11:30 o’clock last night that junior sccuta iiad located the sen- ior caravan resting at Searsville Lake, from where they will pro- ceed to an unknown destination this morning. Since the start of the Senior Sneak yesterday afternoon, the juniors have had them constantly under survelliance, Bonanno said. BULLETIN: Juniors reported capturing 8 to 10 seniors last night but stated they released them to allow their participation In the "sneak". BULLETIN: Contrary to pre- vious reports, juniors stated late last night that seniors had met first at Redwood City after leav- ing the college and then proceeded to Woodside Road where they met a car with a spot -light which led them to their destination for the night. Junior class officials reported late yesterday that senior class- men, in an attempt to elude the highly organized espionage system of the third -year men, had broken precedent and started on their "sneak" during the afternoon. Senior officials could not be reached for confirmation. Junior Sneak Week Chairman Frank Bonanno, giving a detailed account of the sneak, alleged that seniors had started leaving in small groups from 2 o’clock in the afternoon until early in the evening with Hayward as their destination last night and Sunny- vale as the place of initial rendez- vous yesterday. (Continued on Page Fowl Army Airships Provide Play Sound Effects New high in authenticity will be set when the audience hears the roar of airplanes during tense scenes in "Heartbreak House", as the sound effects will be recordings of a squadron of government pursuit ships and three bombers, according to Peter Mingrone, technical assistant adviser. GOVERNMENT COURTESY effects at the field Officials of Moffett Field, local WAR SATIRE army flying base, have consented "Heartbreak House" a satirical to put these planes through ap- propriate maneuvers for the bene- fit of Mr. Mingrone, who is doing the recordings this morning. Original plans were to record the sound effects on the campus, but after a group of planes flew over the college for observation Monday they derided there were too many hazards, and the safer procedure would be to make the play about the last world war, is dealt with by George Bernard Shaw in his wittiest manner and is an excellent choice for the closing production of the spring season be- cause of Its timeliness, according to Hugh Gillis, Speech department head. The comedy will appear in the Little Theater on the nights of May 23 and 24 and Is under the direction of James Clancy.

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Page 1: Spaggi Vail - San Jose State University

rig Up 0

!SfS Offered by

f Santa Clare ,utenant Frank ns office* Gad lard. reported that of San Jose

tate who had the examina-

V receive word they paasKi

final re-cheek.

POINTMENT the examina-

eceiee a flying Which includes, nths’ lornia primary

Randolph and nant Kurtz said.

years’ college

tion from Kelly dor receives a commission ic rve with $245 ’bile on active

the cadet re ,nth, according

relations ofil-

GROUPS it. Lieutenant ieveral college i‘AA students,

4s, Spartan Hall, Gamma

’embers of the

BELLA FE OF TEA sta near Sara en this year as

al YWCA Wive

the College ’1’

!eh will be held

n from 3 to 6

ti will be given

k Includes the

vocal selections

ris, mezzo so-

I on the plane

folk dance

iris dressed in -rs; and origing

Leila Gulmert

tea will be the

!mbers who are

the Advisor:

:e Bryant Miss

Helen Dimmics

ison, president-

ext year.

JSE AT

CLUB

oil have eft" ouse on South

net to the Cl

miter this eve.

Irding to Red’

rgaret O’Keefa.

to music fur.

; recording as-

may anIUSe

s or billiards.

TERM tLY rap coLLcod

causal

giAciiisigcto

ezeiroito IS

SAL. 4311

11001.

E SOT

V(IIV

TIO"warairar."

Yell Leader

_21(760 ColLege___

Tryout Assembly

VOL. XXVIII.

� Spaggi �

Tomorrow Vail SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, ’WEDNESDAY, MAY IS, 1940

� Juniors

Follow Seniors North

Number 14

Seniors Sneak, Juniors Give Chase FOUR IN RACE FOR PRESIDENCY Located

YELL LEADER Last Night; ASPIRANTS Move MEET TODAY Expected

Candidates FACTS FROM Speak Before FRONT GIVEN Assembly BY JUNIORS Tomorrow

Four members of the newly. elected seven -man student council will be candidates for the student body president’s office in the Fri-day elections as two more, Al Aiton and Stanley Murdock, an-

nounced that they would enter the race yesterday.

ASSEMBLY TOMORROW In an attempt to inject pre-elec-

bon enthusiasm into the student body, Van Vleck and members of his campaign committee yesterday organized an assembly to be held at 12 o’clock tomorrow noon where candidates for the ASSC offices will discuss their platforms before students in conjunction with yell leader tryouts.

Van Vleck said that the mem-bers of the new council were work. CI together on the assembly and that Stanley Murdock and Al Aiton, candidates for the presi-dency, and Verne Williams, candi-date for the vice-presidency, had indicated their complete desire to take an active part in the proceedings. George Jorgen-sen, who will also run for the presi-dency, and Bob Payne, candidate for the vice-presidency, could not be reached yesterday.

Senior Propaganda Shown As False

LATEST WAR BULLETIN From

Junior Headquarters.�Contrary to

conflicting reports from the propa-

ganda bureau of the senior class

that 500 juniors had been either

kidnapped or chased into hiding on

Monday night were proven false

when final tabulation on all seniors

taken into the hills was made.

BLITZKRIEG

The junior’s blitzkrieg campaign,

attempting to cope with senior

strategy led by Barney Murphy and Ralph Kelley, was thrown into high

gear Monday night which resulted

in the capture of thirty seniors and

complete demoralization.

Senior Class President Barney

Murphy was the first to feet the

effects of the army tactics of the

juniors. Early yesterday morning

Murphy was seized by the juniors.

Playing on the sympathies of the

soft-hearted third -year men with

his plea for mercy that he was In

Chamber Music CONCERT

Given Friday Jean Brier, violinist, and Jean

Crouch, violoncellist, will be fea-

tured soloists at Friday night’s

annual Evening of Chamber Music,

presented by the chamber music

division of the college Music de-

partment, opening at 8:15 In the Little Theater.

Five string quartets will open

the program with a Bach Chorale

Prelude. In contrast, the ultra-modern school will be represented

by the second string quartet of Arnold Schonberg, professor of music theory at UCLA, and by a one-minute canon by the French modernist, Honegger.

Closing number of the program will be the concerto for four vio-lins by Ludwig Maurer. Twenty-six violins will be used for this number, with four solo violins for the cadenza.

One movement of Baccheren’s concerto for violoncello will be played, with string quartet ac-companiment. Miss Crouch will play the solo.

There will be no charge for ad-mission, and students, faculty and

public are invited, Miss Robinson announces.

no condition to walk home from a s�

long trip, Murphy was allowed to lath Tull Moon’ go free.

ENTERTAINMENT Others to feel the devastating Dance Given work of the juniors were Bill On the assembly program, en-

bis orchestra, and Revelries stars Icy and Ed Grant. Senior Sneak Saturday Night rtainment by Lowell Jones and Lukenbill, Bill Gurnea, Hugh Sta-te

Mae Zimmerman, 13111 Kidwell, and ’ Week Chairman Ralph Kelley went

Jack Harcourt will be featured. into hiding immediately after the

Following final tabulation of Mixer and did not show up until

otes on the color change Monday, classes yesterday.

.ouncilmen said that another Juniors are asked to lose no time test" vote would be taken Friday in assembling the minute word is o discover which of a number or received that the seniors have

Possible color combinations stu- sneaked, stated Sneak Week Chair-ents favored. man Frank Bonanno.

POWER FELT

FIRST JUNIOR FOLLOWS SENIORS--SWAMPED I I

By HARRY GRAHAM "It’s a lngg story!" All I could Five was a blanket, crouched

ever a steaming foot-bath, but I surmised that Gerald Van Snort, tent Junior to follow the seniors, WWI somewhere inside. "Yessir,

I Kodd this cold waitigg for the seddlors we tried to figure out

tat Where they would go tedel tiiiiially wwd up id a swamp!"

He blew his nose. "About four o’clock this mordigg, subboddy

Powded on by door and said Hey you, the seddiors are steeking. So

flodd iddoo a pair of padds and went outside. I met sub awful dice guys, odly I coulditt recogdize theb.

"rheY said We are judicirs. kindly follow us add we will be the

45t to fhb: the seddiors." Ile drew the blanket closer. "We rode

add "Ode, Nit we chitin seeli to be lookigg for anything, until cme

of theh said Here we are! They poitedd out is path to bp add said

The aeildiors are ;limit there go get ’eh! That’s when I godd iddoo

the swamp!" lip caughed. "You dough subthigg 7" Gerald disappeared into the depths of

SC Alka-Seltzer. "I dod thigg theb dab seddiors are gawda steek!"

With bids going fast, members

of the Alpha PI Omega fraternity

are making final plans for their sixth annual "Full Moon" dance this Saturday night at Castlewood

Country club.

Directions for reaching Castle-

wood Country club will be posted

in full on the main bulletin board

either today or tomorrow, Ben

Johnson. chairman, announced yes-

terday.

Music for the affair is being

furnished by Joaquin Gill and his

orchestra, featuring the vocal re-

frains of Miss Jane Churchill. Gill

Is presented through the manage-

ment of the Music Corporation of

America and has played for many

dances at University of California,

and also for affairs in San Fran-

cisco.

The scene of the dance, Castle-

wood Country club, is the former

million-dollar estate of Mrs. Phoe-

be Hearst, and the APO affair will

be the final open function given

at the club as it will he turned

into a dude ranch after June 1.

Bids may be purchased from

zany member of the fraternity or

from the Controller’s office for

$1.25

Taylor Announces Candidacy For Post; Tryouts Tomorrow

Aspirants to three college yell

leaders positions open next quarter

will meet today at 4 o’clock in the

Morris Dailey auditorium. The new Spartan rooting section leaders will

he named Friday in the council

run-off’s.

TAYLOR CANDIDATE With a number of students re-

ported ready to run for the posts, Tom Taylor, one of the three yell

leaders of this year, was yesterday

the first to announce his candi-dacy. Taylor said he would be a candidate for the head yell lead-ership.

TRYOUTS TOMORROW Yell leader tryouts before the

student body, preliminary to Fri-day’s ballotting, will be held to-morrow at 11:00 or 12 o’clock in

the Morris Dailey auditorium. Don True, head of the rally committee, who is scheduled to handle arrange-ments had not yet indicated a defi-nite time for the tryouts yesterday.

Both Jim Fahn and Bob Swan-son, other members of the yell leader trio of thls year, will not run again for the posts.

President Overworks; Told To ’Take It Easy’

"You’re going too hard," the doctor told him. "Take it easy for a while."

So President T. W. MacQuarrie is resting at his home for the next week or ten days, explaining his absence recently from the college. Nothing serious, according to the doctor. A little relaxation will fax him up.

BULLETIN: Junior Sneak Week Chairman Frank Bonanno reported at 11:30 o’clock last night that junior sccuta iiad located the sen-ior caravan resting at Searsville Lake, from where they will pro-ceed to an unknown destination this morning.

Since the start of the Senior Sneak yesterday afternoon, the juniors have had them constantly under survelliance, Bonanno said.

BULLETIN: Juniors reported capturing 8 to 10 seniors last night but stated they released them to allow their participation In the "sneak".

BULLETIN: Contrary to pre-vious reports, juniors stated late last night that seniors had met first at Redwood City after leav-ing the college and then proceeded to Woodside Road where they met a car with a spot-light which led them to their destination for the night.

Junior class officials reported

late yesterday that senior class-men, in an attempt to elude the

highly organized espionage system of the third-year men, had broken

precedent and started on their "sneak" during the afternoon. Senior officials could not be

reached for confirmation.

Junior Sneak Week Chairman

Frank Bonanno, giving a detailed account of the sneak, alleged that seniors had started leaving in small groups from 2 o’clock in

the afternoon until early in the evening with Hayward as their destination last night and Sunny-vale as the place of initial rendez-vous yesterday.

(Continued on Page Fowl

Army Airships Provide Play Sound Effects

New high in authenticity will be set when the audience hears the roar of airplanes during tense scenes in "Heartbreak House", as the sound effects will be recordings of a squadron of government pursuit ships and three bombers, according to Peter Mingrone, technical assistant adviser.

GOVERNMENT COURTESY effects at the field Officials of Moffett Field, local WAR SATIRE

army flying base, have consented "Heartbreak House" a satirical to put these planes through ap-propriate maneuvers for the bene-fit of Mr. Mingrone, who is doing the recordings this morning.

Original plans were to record

the sound effects on the campus,

but after a group of planes flew

over the college for observation

Monday they derided there were

too many hazards, and the safer

procedure would be to make the

play about the last world war, is dealt with by George Bernard Shaw in his wittiest manner and is an excellent choice for the closing production of the spring season be-cause of Its timeliness, according to Hugh Gillis, Speech department head.

The comedy will appear in the Little Theater on the nights of May 23 and 24 and Is under the direction of James Clancy.

Page 2: Spaggi Vail - San Jose State University

PAGE TWO SPARTAN DAILY, 1VE1)NESDAY, MAY 15, 1940

SAN JOSE STATE COLLEGE

J1/2attati Daily Dedicated to the best interests of San lose State

Entered as second dam matter at the Sae Jute Post Unice �

Puldiaed every Woad day by lbsArmbled Studests d Aut Jame Stab Caller. Pm...’ Globe ninthly C. � C.ahmtbis as � MO South ?km Street

Subecriptlaw The par quarter sr BA gar year.

Editorials and features appearing is the Spartan Daily reflect the viewpoint

al the writer aid soahe so claims to represent student or college opinion. AU

maligned editorials are by tke editor.

EDITOR BILL RODRICK 64 Ayer Ave. Phone Ballard 8268

Office Phone, Ballard 7800

BUSINESS MANAGER DICK OFSTAD 281 E. San Fernando Phone Ballard 2461-W

Office Phone, Ballard 7800

ASSOCIATE EDITOR PONY SWENSON

SPORTS EDITOR JOHN HEALEY

DAY EDITOR, This Nan VANCE PERRY

Nearly A ’Record’ . . . Students of this college came near establishing a record

in Monday’s balloting�a record for the lowest number of votes cast in proportion to the total number of undergrad-uates in attendance here at the time of previous council elections.

Certainly ills no compliment to the student body at large when only a little over one-third of its members turn out to vote in the most important of the very few elections of the college year. The total number balloting this time was actually less than voted in last year’s election when officials none too proudly announced that they got a "rec-ord" vote of around jo% of the student body. And the student body has grown considerably since then.

Students either fail to realize or forget that it wasn’t too long ago when strongly organized groups or depart-ments in the college could command enough votes to put men or women on the council representing their own spe-cial interests instead of the college’s at large, providing thel taphone and learn some of the voters remained as apathetic as they did this week. Fortun- senior plans. Now, these methods

PUTTING � The STATE Of Things 2 2 By VANCE PERRY

ately that situation does not now exist, but there is no assurance that it will not come up again.

Without exception, we believe the six men and one woman named to the council positions to be of a definitely high calibre, but is no fault of the student body (and we speak of the whole) that this is the case. We can be but properly thankful and do little but hope for a better turn-out Friday�certainly there is no other means but futile "hope" left to get the majority, not the minority, of the student body to the polls.

Future Sneak Week? . There can be little doubt and practically no proof that

the activity and excitement of Sneak Week has anything but a wholesome effect on the upperclassmen, and, to a certain extent, on the rest of the school.

The congestion of the Mixer, the night-raiding, the tension of waiting for the seniors to leave and the final an-archial riot of The Day itself�all of the familiar aspects of the week provide a safety value for the spring tide of energy; energy that might be diverted into some less de.sir- Uriu, John Kawachi, Bessie Sasao, able channel without as thorough a means of expression as David Sakai, Takumi Kanazawa, this has proven itself. Lillie Fukui, Jane Okada, Momoye

The tradition, too, provides a last wild fling for the Senior class as a whole before the uncompromising finality of Commencement � Sneak Week can hardly be called other than a very welcome tradition.

There are always the possibilities of irregularities, how-ever. None realize more than the upperclassmen themselves that any breach of faith in the administration that allows them to come close to running the school for a week would immediately result in a total suspension of the activity, but occasionally a lowerclassmen, or even one of the warring factions themselves, fly off the handle and consequent-ly give the entire group and the particular year a black mark.

As long as the kidnapping is in fun, the fight on the beach more rough-and-tumble than anything else, and the bitter accusations in the Daily just words, the tradition is a good one�when any phase of this becomes in earnest, the whole affair gets a bad name.

By the time this is printed, the seniors may have left; at an) rate, let’s keep the rest of the week all in fun . . .

�Graham.

� TOGETHER1_ �by pony swenson It seems that overnight the seniors have sneaked, headinno g

Yesterday afternoon the rumors were flying thick and fast aro rth

IT’S ALL OVER�Sneak Week is all over but the shouting. The seniors left town yesterday and last night; the juniors knew they were going to leave and toward what destination they are now headed. It’s a case of a cut and dried Sneak Day with nothing left to do but go through with the formality of the thing. In other words, a good share of the fun and excitement has been taken out of this year’s traditional holi-day because of one of the most dastardly pieces of "double-cross" ever to be committed.

THE DOUBLE X�It all hap-pened when a senior co-ed, whom the class-of-’40 Sneak Day com-mittee had supposedly taken into confidence. phoned Junior Big-wig Fr an k Bonanno yesterday and gave him a detailed account of the graduating class’s plans. As it now stands, this leaves the juniors Th

with nothing to do but take a drive up the country and join the seniors, instead of having to rely on strategy and a "hunch" or two to find the enemy camp. It will be just like the Smith and Jones families meeting at a predestined spot for a picnic.

WRONG IDEA�Relying on me-thods that originate within the class to learn of Sneak Day plans has always been part of the game. There used to be the time when juniors hid in the attics of the houses where seniors met, in order to find out where and when the fourth-year men were going to sneak. This year’s Junior class was clever enough to install a dic-

the campus and through the Daily office that the fourth -year men and women were on their way.

Information to that effect was in the hands of the jUniors ankh earlier and merely was verified by the disappearance of yarioua room.

ortohveotegff eacottntehabt t s oo a inndtosrom ahtTiontawk he ino hh i aseeproa amas and skipped out

mates, lab partners, etc. People came through whispering msg.Jed

to indicate that tee seniors n winenreovnaotiolnonginerswneitaha us.

Week strategy, the plan should have worked perfectly except for the alertness of the juniors and a few other minor details. Going out at night gave the third-year men that much longer to gather their caravan and thoroughly organize the chase. Among the other pinelois of information and news that drifted our way during the afternoon was that sonic of the seniors were dis-satisfied with the way things were going. Especially bitter was one girl who phoned Junior Chairman Frank Bonanno, saying she had heard the seniors were going to sneak last night but she hadn’t been notified and would the juniors please take her.

It Is also assured by the junior leaders that we won the point for kidnapping and that we will win the point in the beach fight, so we can find the seniors after 12 o’clock and still win the contest. But why not make a clean sweep of it?

are all in keeping with the idea and tradition of Sneak Day, but when a member of a class deliber-ately betrays his own group, it’s a different story.

CAN’T BE BLAMED�But the juniors can’t be blamed. What can they do if someone deliberatdly divulges information? The person to be blamed is the mysterious "Miss X" who took it upon herself to turn traitor and "tell all". She "had not been given the final word to sneak." She failed to realize that there were hundreds of others awaiting the same Information. In due time she would have known, but as it happened she could not wait and now everyone knows.

NOTICES Will the following please bring

reports to the Advance Review committee meeting at 12:15 today In Room 119: Toyo Oka, Frank Ono, Fred Yamaguchi, Kiyot o

Kawakami, and Statistics Com-mittee members. The meeting is Important.

There will be a DTO luncheon at the Koffee Kup today at 12:15 unless the seniors sneak.

To all those who voted for me, I extend my greatest appreciation and thanks. �Harrett Mannina.

CUP CAKES

More than a dozen lelici kinds, frosted and pla round and square.

CHATTERTON BAKERY

221-223 South Second sirei-t Opposite YWCA

e Woman .... TIMELY TIPS By FLORENCE SCUDERO

Co-eds have gone completely

clothes-minded these past few weeks�with seniors sneaking to one summer resort, and campus groups planning week-ends to

others. Beach ensemble of vivid splashy

cotton print shorts and blouse, with a short coat to match make a smart and practical outfit to live in while you’re spending a few clays at the beach . . equal-ly popular are the three-piece play suits of a skirt, shirt and slacks (or shorts) of spun rayon cotton. The shirt and skirt are handy for dates at the coast.

Bathing suits are almost too clever to be worn in the water . .

and many are being worn only on the beach . . however .. a prin. cess styled with gored links and nipped -in waist with a whirling skirt . . in white celanese rayon yarn would more than please the vacationing co-ed .. shining white rayon satin lastex with a molded top swing skirt is exceedingly smart . . for the swimmer the elasticized wool of a simple cut would be the most comfortable.

Swimmable playsults in jerseys or cotton with shorts and a short full skirt and bra of matching pattern have proven popular duo ing the last season with more striking and flashy colors for this season.

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Page 3: Spaggi Vail - San Jose State University

heading north. d fast around urth-year men

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LY TIPS

g worn only on ver . . a prin. ored links and ith a whirling celaneee rayon han please the . shining white with a molded is exceedingly swimmer the a simple cut

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ITRACK,MEN READY FOR C.C.A.A. THE

SPARTAN

SPORTFOLIO � By Hank Li/ten

� Freilno athletic officials had �

trie right idea this year when they

%Med five outstanding track and

held meets for the lightning fast

ilackstone cInderpath.

Not only the Raisin City ineti-

talon profits, but the entire city

is doing a booming business over

the five week-end periods.

FRESNO BOOM TOWN

This Friday and Saturday is no

trception as athletes from the four

:CAA schools c o en bine with

:aches and trainers to give the

Southern metropolis .1 minor

boom" as the annual Spring Sports

Carnival invades the town.

a All hotel accommodations

aave been taken for the past two

seeks and the sports populace

a now turning to Fresno’s elab-

mate network of auto camps to

provide for their housing prob-

:ern.

HASHERS THRIVE

� Cafes, road houses, hash

joints, and drive-in eateries re-

sired their first workout of the

spring season on the week -end of

May 4 when the Far Western Con -

’entice finals were runoff. Five

alleges and universities competed

othe inaugural extravaganza and

qpt the entire city personnel busy ’r the three-day period.

Last week-end the outstanding :tack and field event in the na-:ion, The West Coast Relays, new a crowd of 30,000 to the

aigh school, junior college, inter-alleglate and open events.

C.C.A.A. THIS WEEK

� Now again Friday and Sat -.,day the athletic horde of the four :alifornia Collegiate Athletic Con-itrence cortipetes in swimming, Ionic, golf and track and field.

In addition to the competition a sports, loop officials will pre-are the schedule for all sports ;sr the coming year and will :raw up the 1941 gridiron pro-MO.

MePHERSON ACTS I Plenty of fireworks are ex-

acted as several of the mentors in planning to suggest drastic eanqes in the league setup. Little

known of the exact content of te anticipated motions, but Walt McPherson’s proposal of a double -tend of games in both basketball A baseball will be one of the ’Plights of the get-together.

SPOSTS SWEEPINGS � The head timer of the Relays

your reporter that all five of ’Official watches caught Harold

:avis, former Morgan Hill prep cPsation now competing for Sal-

j.e,, in 9.5, while Stanford’s -ear, Clyde Jeffrey was caught Ir four watches in 9.5 and one 8th Le,

JEW A SUGGESTION I wonder which promoter will

he the first to bring together Arla, Jeffrey and Eddy Morris, )(Huntington Beach high school. in a 220-yard race. Both Davis

ttd Morris have been timed In this year, while Jeffrey has

a Mark of 20.3 to his credit dur-1239 campaign.

It would even top a mile race th Zonlperini, Moore, Mehle,

.fanke and San Ramoni entered. Ill San Jose’s coaching staff was !In

represented at the Relays as Ill Hubbard, Walt McPherson, :enk Carroll and Tiny Hartranft the Proceedings. McPher-

" lot quite a kick out of listen -

"’ t° Doan �Cromwellp Use’s

der of champions.

__Spaztan Dail

nor tal �

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 1940

Spring Practice Ends Today Or Tomorrow FOUR GOLFERS Date Of Senior Sneak

ne Last Day Of Workouts when they will choose the Spartan aggregation in the meet.

Following the team’s final hard workout last night, the Washing-

Leaving the final day of spring ton Square mentor stated that the roster will be picked in a confer -

Jaycee opponents.

PRACTICE GAMES

Jack Dixon, who is San Jose’s

hope for the CCAA crown in the

singles, brushed up on his shots

in his first workout since the

Northern trip last week. George

Kifer, whose matches always go

to three sets, stuck to his old

custom In his match with the San

Mateo netter.

Vie Ehle and George Egling also

took their first workout on Cali-

fornia soil in two weeks preparing

for the conference matches this

PICKED FOR C.C.A.A. PLAY practice up to the seniors, Coach ence with the two co-captains.

MERMEN DRILL

SPARTAN ROSTER TO BE CHOSEN BY HARTRANFT TODAY

FINALS SET FOR SATURDAY NIGHT IN RAISIN CITY

Bill l’arton, Captain Warner Keeley, Bill Hem n and Ken Horn-lein will make up the four-man Spartan golf team which will com-pete in the CCAA sports carnival in Fresno Friday and Saturday.

The four were selected yester-day afternoon following final 18 hole play of a 36 hole qualifying round among five competing mem-bers of the squad at the San Jose Country club.

Out of the 36 hole tournament to decide just who goes to Fresno, Parton emerged with a low score of 144. Keeley, Hornieln, and Bern tied at 150. Herb Showers, who had a 75 for the first round played over the week-end, came in with an 80 yesterday for a total of 155.

Other scores yesterday found Parton with a low 71, Keeley and Hornlein, 72, and Hem m 74.

Little is known of the other col-leges in the conference who will send four-man teams to partici-pate in the team play. Santa Bar-bara is defending champion, but will be without the services of

Walt Gilliam, runner-up In the state amateur championships this

year. As for Fresno, the Spartans

already hold a decisive win over

the Bulldogs. The Washington Square team

goes to Fresno with 32 consecutive

victories behind them. Following

the carnival meet which will be

staged at the Fort Washington and

Sunnyside courses Friday and Sat-

urday, the team will meet their

next competition on Saturday. May

25, at Stanford. The Indians are

To Determi

Ben Winkelman will terminate the 1940 preliminary grid drills either today or tomorrow.

Should the seniors sneak today, a final practice session will be held Thursday. If the day of the fourth-year advance is Thursday or Friday, today’s workout will be the final one before the autumn quarter.

Several outstanding changes were noticed in this year’s ses-sions. The drastic move of Wink-elman and Warner in switching Duke Tornell, grid and cage star, from his position at tackle to the ball -carrying fullback spot caused a great deal of commotion from followers of the cowhide sport. ....Tornell surprised even the most severe critics by coming through with excellent performances in his new position. Should he continue his steady improvement, Spartan fans will not notice the gradua-tion of Leroy Zimmerman and Carlton Peregoy, last year’s tail-back sensations.

The backfield combination of Joe Rishwain, Aubrey Minte r, Rex Purse!! and Tornell looked effec-tive in the numerous scrimmages. The line, although suffering great-ly from the loss of several out-standing 1939 performers, will be able to hold its own against any on the coast.

Johnny Allen and Ed Wenberg at ends were especially outstand-ing in the early season workouts.

considered the most powerful Uni-versity team in the country, having

won the national team title two

consecutive years.

VARSITY, FROSH NETTERS PERFORM AGAINST JAYCEE

San Jose’s varsity tennis performers said goodbye to home courts

for the year yesterday afternoon when they encountered San Mateo

junior college in an informal match.

The Spartans’ four entries in the

California Collegiate Athletic As- week -end.

sociation finals to be held in Fres- Jim Emerson, freshman basket-

no Friday anti Saturday took it ball player, played In the number

easy in their matches against the three singles position for the Spar-

tans, while Eddie LaFrank per-

formed in the fourth spot. Jess

emir, another freshman, com-

pleted the singles brigade in the

fifth berth. MATCH POSTPONED

The scheduled match of the

freshman and junior varsity slated

for the Bacheeto Park courts yes-

terday was postponed until tomor-

row at the request of their oppon-

ents. Armstrong junior college

from Berkeley.

The Frosh-Jayvee encounter will

wind up the tennis schedule for

San Jose this year.

NOTICE - Popular Swing Records - Will all those students who plan ts Ten W

cents rich � ���� 1VC C

to do student teaching during the

Autumn quarter pelase make up- CALIFORNIA RADIO SHOP plIcatIon with M a r y-E thelle New and Used Radios

Schweizer in the Education office,’ Open until 9 F

Room 161, as soon as possible. 588 West San Carlos Col 3036 i

Coach Tiny Hartranft and Co-Captains Ticky Vasconcellos and Tony Sunzeri will map out the San Jose offense for the 1940 Califor-

nia Collegiate Athletic Association track and field championship today

FOR FRESNO CARNIVAL

With main competition expected to come from Fresno State col-lege’s Bulldogs, Coach Charlie Walker continues to drill his var-sity swimming squad for the CC-AA spring sports carnival meet scheduled in Fresno this week-end.

STIFF COMPETITION San Diego State, entering the

second annual meet for the first time, is reported to have an up and coming swim team. Saturday’s meet will be their first step into the rather stiff CCAA competition and although expected to place, several of their men are not ex-pected to cop the meet.

Santa Barbara State, third in last year’s meet which was won by San Jose, has little more to offer than last year, according to reports from the Gaucho institu-tion.

NEW TEAM Fresno State has practically an

entirely new team from that of last year entered in this week-end’s meet. Pinckney, their ace diver, is the only threat returning from the 1939 squad who placed in the CCAA meet last spring. He was second to Devins of San Jose in diving, and will be facing even stronger competition this year from Jack Windsor and Ken Ad-erman, who, incidentally, will be entering their first spring carnival

Other Fresno threats expected

to press the Spartans are Kiff,

Wells, Gregory, Quisenberry, Pia-

ugher, Barsted and Huffman in

the free style events: Weymouth

along with Pinckney in diving;

Miller, Black and Tilson in the breast stroke; and Turnbull in

the back stroke.

SPARTANS FAVORED Making up Walker’s San Jose

squad, favored to repeat last year’s win when it captured seven out of nine first places for a sweeping victory, will be Jim Curran, Gene Shirokoff, Joe Weitzenberg, Claude Horan, Roger Freller, Guy Wa-then, Jack Porter, Windsor, Dal-las, Aderman, Dean Fostel, Her-bert Hussey, John Hatch and Cap-tain Bill Johnston.

The meet will commence at 9:30 a.m. In Weymouth’s pool just out- .1YOUR SELECTION side of Fresno. PREPARED WITH CARE

Hartranft is slated to double up his men in most of the events. San Jose will have no entries in the two dash events, as Dave Siemon, Spar-tan sprinter, will confine his run-ning to the 220-yard low hurdles in which he boasts the best time in the conference.

RUBLE RUNS HALF Vin Ruble, who has smashed two

school records this year, is entered in the half mile and relay. The slender distance ace is favored in this event as Bobby Madrid, Fres-no’s premier leather lunger, is scheduled to run in the mile and two-mile events. If Ruble is right, the competition may force him to a new school record in the two-lap event.

Jim Kerr and John Sedell, mem-bers of the mile relay team that unofficially broke the school rec-ord In the Fresno Relays, are en-tered in the quarter mile. The two Spartans will be facing the tough-est competition of the year, but may sneak in for several points. Bob Woods, who has been running the 880 in dual meet competition, will be entered in the relay only.

GRANT ENTERS TWO Ed Grant is slated to do double

duty in the javelin and high jump. Grant’s best throw in the javelin event rates him number two man In the conference. Larry Sundahl of Fresno, last year’s winner, is the favorite. Grant has been con-sistent at six feet and may go higher with the excellent jumping pit at Fresno.

Big Don Presley is the Spartan hope in the weight events. He has the best marks in the conference in both the shot put and discus. His closest competition is expected from Fred Holtclaw of Fresno In the discus and Brown of San Diego In the shot put.

TICKY PRESSED Ticky Vasconcellos is slated to

have plenty of trouble from Collier, Fresno’s lanky teepee, who has been improving with each meet in the broad jump. Collier also is a probable winner in the high jump, in which he has the best mark of the season.

The hurdles will be the closest contested events on the program. Fresno’s Pat Zebal and Fred Elsart of San Diegc will be battling for the first place medal. John Peek of the Washington Square aggre-gation may surprise In this event.

The team Is slated to leave San Jose early Saturday morning.

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Page 4: Spaggi Vail - San Jose State University

PAGE FOUR SPARTAN DAILY, WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 1940

ANNUAL YWCA’ SILVER TEA TODAY AT 3:00

ENTERTAINMENT

The Silver Tea sponsored annu-

ally by the College YWCA Advis-

ory Board will be held this after-

noon from 3 to 6 o’clock at Rancho

Bella Vista, the Blaney Estate, near

Saratoga.

The estate, which has been closed

to the public for 10 years, will

be made available to the ’Y’ group.

The entire gardens will be open

to guests and tea will be served

in the dining room of the villa,

according to YWCA officials. ’

From 4 to 5 o’clock, a program

will be given consisting of several

songs by Henrietta Harris accom-

panied on the piano by Odney Spil-

lum, folk dances by six Japanese

girls in native costumes and or-

iginal modern da n ces by Leila

Gulmert. Transportation for students de-

siring it will be provided by fac-

ulty and advisory board members.

Faculty members assisting with

Silver Tea are: Mrs. Florence Bry-

ant, Mies Grace Plum, Miss Helen

Dimmick and Dr. Bertha Masson.

ALL-COLLEGE HORSE SHOW MAY 24

Students are invited to attend

the all -San Jose State college

Horse Show which will be held

Friday, May 24, at the Goings

Academy, located near Rampone’s

Villa, according to Miss Evelyn Amaral, adviser of the Riding

club, group sponsoring the show.

A limited number of students will be able to enter the show

and are asked to sign up early on the bulletin boards which have been placed in both gymnasiums. Entrants may ride English or Western style.

Following the show, a Bar-B-Q will be held, to which each entrant may bring one guest. A small fee will be charged for the use of the mounts, Miss Amaral stated. Mar-celle Fatjo is president of the club.

Story Telling League Meets Tomorrow

Miss Margaret Douglas will tell the story of "All Fellows and the Cloak of Friendship" at the meet-ing of the Story Telling League when the group meets tomorrow evening at 7:30 in Room 122.

A representative from the Camp Leadership group is expected to attend and present a story. All students are invited to attend the meeting.

LOST: Set of keys in brown leather key container. Please re-turn to Lost and Found or to Dolores Freitas, Publications office.

All members of "As You Like It" meet for lunch tomorrow In Room 3 of the H.E. building. Plans for the future will be discussed.

�Jessica Wood.

Election Day Dance Planned For Friday

An Election Day dance, from 12:15 to I o’clock Friday, has been announced by Social Af-fairs Chairman Don Anderson.

The student body affair will be held in the Quad. Sheldon Taix will furnish the music.

Prospective Flyers Are Examined Like This . . .

Pictured above is a scene familiar to San Jose State students who have appeared before the

9th Corps Area flying examination board for entrance to the United States army air corps reserve.

Engineering Frat Begins Initiation Of Neophytes

Pledging period for neophytes of

Epsilon Nu Gamma, engineering

fraternity, began yesterday, ac-

cording to Richard Worthen, presi-

dent. Informal initiation of the frater-

nity will be held tomorrow night

at 7:00 with the formal initiation

and dinner scheduled for Monday

night. Dressed in the uniform of rail-

road engineers are the following

pledges: Richard Bettinger, Rob-

ert Colley, Welko Gasich, Fernan-

do Herrero, Frank Kukuk, Victor

McLaughlin, William Murray, Wil-

liam Myer, Lyman Nickel and

Owen Rogers.

Debaters Meet San Francisco State Saturday

Taking the negative side of the

question, Kenneth Nagel and Vince

Carboni will debate against San Francisco State college over radio station KROW Saturday afternoon at 5 o’clock on the question, "Re-solved: that there should be more vocational training in high school."

The San Jose debaters contend that vocational training should be given in college and not in high school.

SNEAK r (Continued from Page Our)

Ultimate destination of the sen-iors today where the principal Sneak Day hostilities will take place was unknown, but Bonanno reported that the junior scouting forces would keep close watch on the large senior caravan.

Juniors, according to Bonanno, will leave this morning at 6 o’clock in pursuit of senior class-men with a few cars remaining until about 8 o’clock to take care of stragglers.

SABOTAGE It was learned laid night that

Junior Class Adviser Bill Sweeney had early this week warned junior class officials that the sneak would be made during yesterday after-noon and that final confirmation had come when an unknown senior woman, sabotaging secret plans of the graduating class, had informed third -year Generalissimo Bonanno that the seniors would leave yes-terday.

With the balance of the senior class away on the sneak, the bat-tle quieted down last night, and

Undergoing the eye test under the scrutiny of a doctor of the medical air corps is part of the examination. The young man

pictured is headed for a flying career which will lead him to final training at Kelly field, Texas.

AWS Council Votes On Three Issues Tomorrow

Members of the AWS Council will vote upon three important matters at a meeting tomorrow afternoon at 4:00 in the AWS room.

The council will vote upon the advisability of changing the name of the combined AWS-WAA or-ganization to AWA ( Associated Women’s Activities). This change is thought advantageous by coun-cil members in view of the fact that it will more easily represent the two member groups.

The vote will be accompanied by a recommendation that the name of AWS be re -assumed after one or two years so that the organiza-tion will be more easily aligned with national groups organized under that title.

A chairman for the national con-vention to be held at San Jose State college will be appointed to-day. Third measure to be consid-ered will be the naming of a voting date for a poll on the new AWA constitution.

Norma Ojstedt Elected Head Of Swim Club

--Miss Norma Ojstedt, sophomore

from Hayward. was elected presi-dent of the Women’s Swim club last night at a brief business meeting following the quarterly Swim-A-Nic dinner, according to Ruby Freitas, outgoing president.

Plans were made by the group to attend the Aquacade at the San Francisco Fair before the end of the quarter.

Mr. Ralph Carlson, of the Amer-ican Red Cross, will be at the pool every night next week to examine candidates for rank of instructor of swimming and water safety, according to Miss Freitas.

while both sides claimed near anihilation of the opposing fac-tion, victory will probably be won today one way or another at the

Smock and Tam weenie roast tomorrow from 6 to 8 p.m. at 491 So. 7th street. Members please see I bulletin board.

ARTISTS MATERIALS

scene of the annual beach fracas canvas. flrushes. Papers. Colors providing Juniors can marshal suf- SAN JOSE PAINT ficient forces to overcome powerful & WALLPAPER CO. senior opposition. 117 So 2nd St Col. MI - -

Deadline For Flying Test Extended Another Day

---Due to the enthusiastic response of San Jose State college studente

interested in flying, Major Thomas W. Blackburn, president of the flying cadet examining board, has advanced the test deadline to today at noon to accommodate the large number of applicants, according to Lieutenant Frank Kurtz, public re-lations officer and recorder of the board.

Fifty students, more than any other college or university in the Bay area, have already signed up here to take the tests offered by the flying cadet examining board In the University of Santa Clara health center.

Lieutenant Kurtz reported that those who pass the examination will receive flying cadet appoint. ments immediately.

Training, preliminary to actual flying, will include work in a California primary school, basic training at Randolph field and all-vanced study at Kelly field. At least two years’ college training is is prerequisite.

Two hundred and forty-five dol-lars per month will be earned by the army aviator receiving a ICc.

ond lieutenant’s commission fol-lowing o g gn ivraadcutateionduf from . A Ks a st Kelly field wt

dent, the cadet receives $105 per month, according to the public relations officer.

- - -

Beta Chi Sigma Chooses Three Representatives

Beta Chi Sigma fraternity will

meet this evening at 1483 Hedding

Court to choose three represents.

fives to be sent to the Inter-Fra�

ternity Council, according to Ger

don Lunsford, publicity represen-

tative. Plana for a formal initiation oe

May 29 will be discussed, and ar-

rangements for a fraternity picnic

on June 2 at Niles Canyon will

be made at this meeting, Longford

said.

BOND ELECTION PETITION CIRCULATED

Beginning an intensive three-

day campaign to obtain 500 sig.

natures, Verne Williams, newly’

elected councilman, and a crew of

assistants are circulating petition;

asking for a special bond election

for a new high school.

The campaign will continueuntii

Friday, with signatures of both

faculty members and registered

voters among student WO beffig

sought. Circulated through the efforts e

the Parent -Teachers Association of

San Jose, the petitions ask for

election June 11.

WEEKLY EYE-TEAS

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OPTOMLISIST

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