. The black and gold [serial]. 23 RICHARD BROWN. 25 PAULINE CLY. 26 WILLIAM JUSTICE, 25 IDA C. GALLOWAY, 27 SPRUILL THORNTON, 25 JANE KILBURN, 27 FANNYE WILSON, 25 JAMES SHORE. 25 Art Editor PIERSON RICKS, 26 Associate Art Editor CHARLES JENKINS, 26 Associate Art Editor EDWARD MICKEY, 25 Business Manager ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS JOE CARLTON, 25 MARION FOLLIN, 26 TOM SMOTHERS, 25 ALPHONSE DAYE, 26 Faculty AdvisorMISS HAZEL STEPHENSON For Advertising Rates, Address the Manager iEbttonala PROBLEMS A veritable labyrinth of problems must be threaded by every onewho attains any degree of success
. The black and gold [serial]. 23 RICHARD BROWN. 25 PAULINE CLY. 26 WILLIAM JUSTICE, 25 IDA C. GALLOWAY, 27 SPRUILL THORNTON, 25 JANE KILBURN, 27 FANNYE WILSON, 25 JAMES SHORE. 25 Art Editor PIERSON RICKS, 26 Associate Art Editor CHARLES JENKINS, 26 Associate Art Editor EDWARD MICKEY, 25 Business Manager ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS JOE CARLTON, 25 MARION FOLLIN, 26 TOM SMOTHERS, 25 ALPHONSE DAYE, 26 Faculty AdvisorMISS HAZEL STEPHENSON For Advertising Rates, Address the Manager iEbttonala PROBLEMS A veritable labyrinth of problems must be threaded by every onewho attains any degree of success or achievement in life. Onlythose of keen perception and untiring diligence can wind their wayalong the paths of the bewildering maze that life seems to make moreperplexing and intricate with the passage of each year. The rashand foolhardy rush blindly forward and are soon irrevocably lost alongthe tortuous trails that lead nowhere. The weak and timid are ap-palled by the darkness and dreariness that the true problems of life. BLACK AND GOLD 69 seem to reflect and they do not advance far into the cavern from whichonly the strong return. The self-conscious can not make any headway,for they are stumbling along, walking backwards trying to see who isridiculing them; but self-consciousness is a not incurable disease, forwhich the best prescription is the constant association with so-called brilliant men sometimes begin their journey with asplendid spurt; but, alas! many of them soon see no sense in continu-ing the race, and languor and listlessness cause them to drop by thewayside where they are usually engulfed in the mud of dissipation,social estrangement, vain regret, despair, bitterness, death. Someflounder wildly, shrieking at their inability to proceed safely andsanely; others mercilessly beat their brains out against the jaggedrocks of obstacle and resistance which they do not know how to re-move or surmount. The majority—the masses—pitter and patter,day in an
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectschooly, bookyear1910