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Page 29 text:
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mightily to produce a worthy dance without cellophane, crepe paper, or new board: not even a double-A priority would have pro- duced them. The Gym was decorated at last with flags and shields bearing regimental insignia, and in the Natatorium-the hardest of all places to mask effectively-there was a huge Institute shoul- der patch, glowing yellow and orange and soft black under ultra- violet lights, which reflected in the water and cast the spell of a full moon on the spectators. His Excellency, the Governor of New Nlexico, attended with a party which included Nlajor General Allen. lylajor John E. Smith labored mightily over the Final Ball, as did the entire cadet committee. Commencement, altogether, was a busy and brilliant occasion, its significance dimmed by only one irretrievable absence, the loss of Cadet Nlajor Roy F. Wlard. The fact of his death must remain a part of this yearls history, as his memory will remain with all who knew him. fPage 251
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Page 28 text:
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l l li fPage 24l the vacant rooms in barracks, their blinds drawn, doors locked, their stoops not quite so dustless as the adjoining quarters. NVith The Bronco staff decimated, a cry went up from the First Class appeal- ing for help: it was late in coming, and that accounts, perhaps, for the fact that a new precedent was established with this issue: it was not available for signing at the end of school, and all apologies are made herewith for that contratemps. The overnight bivouac was the most strenuous military endea- vor of the year. There were skirmishes and clashes by night, and rumor insists that two cadet platoons were entirely lost for a time. Be that as it may, it was a tired Corps of Cadets which returned from its labors, and many a story was told of tall evasion and maneuver. A rifle was missing next morning, some compasses mis- placed temporarily, but at last everything was accounted for, and new blisters might burn, but were hidden by stout shoes. The Final Ball committee, with Gerrity at its head, struggled
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Page 30 text:
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fPage 26j Thus the year in hrief review, as it appears to the editor of The Bronco. A yearbook should not he filled with teXt, however, hut with pictures. In the sections which follow, the editor has kept his words well to the hackgroundg if a picture is worth ten thousand words, then let the following pictures speak for themselves. Q 4
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