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Page 261 text:
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.' SYLLABUS l923 All in all, the smoker surely kept up to the standard attained by previous classes, and the Freshmen went home appreciative of the good time the Sophomores had given them. The year will end in a final splurge during Junior Week. At this time the B.U. Show, the tirst annual University show, will take place at a prominent Boston theatre. This show, a production of the entire University, promises to be one worth seeing, not from the standpoint of supporting B.U. activities, but from its own virtue as a musical comedy. Rehearsals have been held several times a week for several months. Music has been especially written by B.U. students for this show, and in all ways it is to be a strictly first-class production. During the same week the Junior Prom will also be held. This is a University project and the largest ball room in Boston has been secured, at the Somerset Hotel. A new system of disposing of the tickets is being introduced this year, as the Juniors have the lirst preference, and then if any tickets are left the underclassmen may obtain them if they enter their names on the waiting list. According to advance information, but very few underclass men will be able to obtain tickets on account of the Juniors' exceptional support to this affair. The Com- mittee promises us a wonderful time, and a large amount is to be spent in favors which will be both novel and worthwhile. In a few days now the regular school term will be over. For Freshmen and Sophomores it will mean a generous vacation, with the anticipation of more years at 525 Boylston St., but with the juniors it is good-bye to our regular college days. We now are on a more serious quest, for what we shall be depends on ourselves and our diligence at our work. Always shall we remember our days at B.U. We cannot now say they are our happiest in our lives, but if we take the words of men who have been graduated for many years, we shall never again have the good times that we have enjoyed going through college. So even though we appreciate B.U. at the present time, it is nothnig to what we shall learn to appreciate of the knowledge and good times that dear old Alma Mater has given us. . Qffz Q 3 I Q JAQAQ W 2 i -T ' A ,jfwfffl ffm ? NG! 4 ll Aww? i QQ! af 264
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Page 260 text:
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Page 262 text:
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SUMMER SCHOOL Maine Poem Maine, we cherish you as ours, With your pretty woodland bowers, And your rivers ever winding in and outg Through the valleys 'neath the hills And enjoined to them the rills, Gentle streams that How from countryside about. Oh, the beauty of your lakes- They seem placed there for our sakes, For the heart and eye of B.U. men to feastg Ah, this surely is the life, Far away from city strife, In a land of Naturc's beauty and of peace. Fellow Golzlbrickers, Gl0'Ul'l'lUIll'I1l Tourists and Prairie Viz'w1'rs.'- Bonjour, Messieursf' as the Frogs say. One year has passed since we brought home our SYLLABUS to show the folks our name in print as proof of the splendid work we were doing in school. And mother showed the book to the neighbors who averred to other neighbors that her Henry was doing splendid work at college- Why, I actually saw his name in a book-so it must be so. But just think-a year from now many of us will be working CO death! where is thy sting?j, we accountants busily debiting cash and crediting some trick account that had been figuratively pummeled into us by Professor Gogging our ad-men in deep thought, Shall we accept that 3IO0,000 contract Ccries of Yuh! Sure!j of Colgates ? - our salesmen cxpounding to non-esthetic housewives the delights attain- ablelin reading The Merits of the 12th Century Lyric Poetsn at 51.00 down and that sort of thing, old fellow,-our psychologists CO you Mayor of Lawrencej will be psyching some old-time manager for a job-our Foreign Traders knowing that the wine trade of France demands attention will be planning a trip to become more inti- mate with their subject, all this crowd and more in their spare moments Cof which there will be manyj will be writing thusly: Osmond Isaac O'MacShauncssey, B.B.fl. with the B.B.A. more prominent than their names-like three spare tires would look on the rear of Professor Babb's flivver. WHAT A ROSY FUTURE! BUT OH! AWHAT A PAST! ,Herein we look upon the idle moments that we Hitted away while at Ellsworth University. Summer of 1921 came and the majority of the Veterans Bureau, preferring the cool shade of Ellsworth to the dirty, hot streets of Beantown, went north. 265
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