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"And don't you forget Dave Darrin, either!" Late in March, it was the biggest day of Spring out at the High School Athletic Field. This field, the fruit of the labors of the Alumni Association for many years, was a model one even in the best of High School towns. The field, some six acres in extent, lay well outside the city proper.

The powerful frame and compelling presence of Chancellor Tappan are well portrayed in the magnificent bas-relief by Karl Bitter, now in Alumni Memorial Hall, a fitting tribute to his influence upon the University on the part of his former students. Especially noteworthy is his representation here with his favorite mastiff, "Leo," his inseparable companion.

If you've got good working alumni, you're right in it, you see. We generally appoint a committee to talk things over with the alumni." "You mean," said Bryan, drawing his brows together in a comical way behind his goggles, "you mean pray, I suppose." "Why," said Allison, flushing, "I suppose that would be a good idea. I hadn't thought of it just in that way."

I remember it all very well because I sang in the glee-club concert which we gave in the opera house to help the fund, and because our classroom work was very light, as the president and half of the faculty were canvassing the State for aid. We worked desperately faculty, alumni, and students. Even Mr.

He likewise gladly and of his own free will took part in the exercises of the Alumni, of whom twelve, called the Pueri, had to sing at holy mass, and at burials and festivals, as well as in the streets before the houses of the great city families and other worthy citizens.

One day just before they left Marietta for the last time, in carelessly turning over the pages of a Harvard Alumni Bulletin, he had found a column which told him what his contemporaries had been about in this six years since graduation.

Thus, though the alumni of the University have no direct voice in the administration, as have the graduates in many other institutions, they have established several agencies through which their natural desire to have a recognized share in University affairs may be expressed.

By May 315 men had been recommended for training camps, and 500 had left the University to enlist. The Regents also authorized the circulation of the 43,000 alumni and former students for the University Intelligence Bureau, and 25,000 replies, giving the qualifications of each individual for various forms of war service, were received.

He also took occasion to suggest that the University would always have to be in a measure dependent upon the alumni, since the Legislature would never become so generous in its appropriations as to make private gifts undesirable or unnecessary.

"Nobody would call you bad. You are a lovable man when you keep straight," Burgess declared cordially. "I graduated from the university back in the sixties," Bond went on. "You!" Burgess exclaimed. "Yes, I'm one of your alumni brothers from Harvard.