4 ST. AUGUSTINE’S RECORD ST. AUGUSTINE’S COLLEGE (A Frc.slmiim Composition) In tlio city of Ilaloigli, tlio capital city of JsToi'tli Carolina, sufficiently remote from tlie business section to retain its rural beauty, yet near enough to assure its students all city conveniences, is St. Augustine’s College. One entering its portals is impressed by tlie picturesque beauty of the well-kept lawns and by the artistic arrangement of more than seventy-five varieties of trees, flowers and shrubbery. The college owns 110 acres of well-appointed land, of which thirty-five acres constitute the campus proper, which is noted throughout the South for its excellently ])reserved natural beauty. 'I'herc are twenty-eight buildings, the majority of which are either fireproof or semi-fireproof. The total value is estimated at over a half mil lion dollars, 'i'wo dormitories for women and ou(“ for men offer ample housing accommodations for boarding students. In each dormitory there is an infirmary where ill students may receive treatment and first-aid; wliilc^ St. Agnes’ Hosjjital, on the campus, stands ready to receive those who fall seriously ill and are in need of jirofessional attention. Still, “an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure,” and St. Augustine’s spares no efforts in kee])ing its students healthy. From the college farm adjoining the campus, student.s get fresh vegetables. In the model dairy twenty-two test(>d milk cows yield more than a hundred quarts of milk daily, and seventy-five hogs and i>igs are available for fre.sh meat. All this is for student consumption. 'riu; convenience of the students luis been placed first in almost all project.s. Tliere are regular mail and express (k'livery to the campus, bus service within one block of the grounds, telephone service in every dormitory, and a modernly equipped steam laundry on the campus where the stu(h*nts’ laundry is done. Tlie coll(>go student’s activities are centered about the cha])el, tbi' administration and science luills, the dining hall, and the beautiful now Ben son Library. 'I’hese buildings and the dormitories are eommodiously erected facing a large quad rangle. Such a congenial environment is ro- fiected u])on the general disposition of the student body. On(‘ might write indefinitely about the advan tages whicli St. Augustine’s has to offer withoiit impressing the reader, since many other colleges offer similar advantages. But there is too a spirit of hrotlu;rhood rarely found in other institutions. 'I'his sj)irit is passed on from class to class, and is treasured as the most valued asset of which St. Augustinc^’s can boast. CAMPUS NOTES To inform students and staff about the work of the ^buerican Church Institute for Xegroes and its constituent schools, an interesting assem bly program was presented on the Thursday pre ceding “Institute Sunday” (January 13). Grad uates of St. Paul School and Voorhees Institute gave lively three-minute talks. ^[iss Lettye Wheaton, a member of St. ^Vugustino’s staff who has served at four Institute schools, gave a vivid picture of the work and the needs of some of the other institutions. In his sermon on Institute Day, the President stressed the contribution of Christian educational institiitions. The offering was dedicated to the work of the Institute. Miss !Mariou Talley, distinguished young pian ist, appeared in recital at St. Augustine’s, Janu ary 12. Miss Talley is a graduate of the Juilliard School of ^lusic. The annual meeting of the State “15 in 1” clubs, organized throughout the rural high schools of the State to promote efficiencj' in subsistence farming, was held at St. Augustine’s, January 1. The college was host at a dinner, at which time President Goold and others greeted the delegates. Among the guests was Mr. Henry A. Hunt, prin cipal of Fort Valley High and Industrial School, who is at present connected with the Farm Credit Bureau in 'Washington. Superintendent J. W. Holmes and Prof. Arthur P. Chippey represented St. Augustine’s at the rwent meeting of officials of the Institute schools held at Fort Valley School, Fort Valley, Georgia. During the trip, which was nuide by automobile, they saw nuiny graduates and friends of St. Augustine’s. President Edgar II. Goold and Dean Charles H. Boyer attended the meeting of the Associa tion of Colleges and Secondary Schools held at Atlanta University rwently. At the faculty meet ing in January Dean Boyer gave an illuminating report of the ses(i0ns. George II. ^litchell, Arthur P. Chippey and Cecil I). Halliburton represented the college at the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association’s an nual meeting in Washington in December. The Choral Club repeated its Christmas Carol program at Christ Church, Kaleigh, on the Sun day after Cliristnuis. Dr. Milton A. Barber, a member of the Boanl of Trustees of St. Augus tine’s, is re*tor of Christ Church.