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Page 25 text:
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me I9 in IZOREJTERL' 47' wg. ' ' Alumni Association THE GENERAL ASSOCIATION The object of this Association is the cultivation of social relations and the perpetua- tion of fellowship among the alumni and former students, the advancement of the interests and the extension of the influence of the College. Membership in this Association is of three classes-graduate, associate, and hon- orary. To the first class are eligible all graduatesg to the second class, all former students who have been in attendance at the College for two years: and to the third class, mem- bers of the faculty, former students not eligible as associates, and others, who by reason of exceptional devotion to the interests of the College, may be elected by the Association to such membership, The active members of this Association pay to its treasurer an annual fee of one dollar or more for the maintenance of scholarships and for contingent expenses. The ofhcers for l909-IO are: President . . . A . William Mather Lewis, '00, Lake Forest First Vice-President . Lloyd A. Munger, '07, Chicago Second Vice-President . Mrs. Jennie Wood Sicltles, '99, Dixon Secretary and Treasurer .... Allen C. Bell, '03, Lake Forest Alumni Day, I908, will be Tuesday, June Zlst. The morning and afternoon will be devoted to class reunions, informal gatherings and old-time outdoor sports among Alumni teams. In the evening the annual meeting and dinner of the Association will be held. A few years ago saw the inception of a new movement in the Association, as a result of which an Alumni Fund has been created, open to class and individual contribu- tions, to be paid in annual amounts, and to be devoted to two purposes, as follows: I. Half of the contributions each year will go to the establishment of a permanent fund, the principal of which will be kept intact. II. The second half will form a current fund and will be used to satisfy needs which the general funds of the College cannot supply. This fund has already permitted the Association to undertake several laudable enterprises in the interest of better under- graduate life, as well as materially Ito assist in the promotion of the Alumni-Trophy Room. which has become the repository of interesting and valuable Lake Forest memorabilia. I9
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Page 24 text:
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qf1ffs.ff..i -FQQWELY? ,THE I9 ll 12o1QErrc12 stfsgQ5 ing prescribed methods. Then in the subsequent years as, through the mental awakening which results from persistent study, he discovers what his true interests are, he may be allowed an increasing freedom in selecting those subjects which appeal to him and call forth his best efforts. Thus he wins for himself the only true freedom-that of self-de- termination-the ability to choose those lines of intellectual activity which serve best to realize the possibilities of his own nature. The American college may be improved, I believe, and its gravest defects removed, by giving more thought and attention to the main purpose of its existence-that of giving instruction. The work done in the various classes must be made more thorough and ex- acting. The instructors must assign heavier tasks and impose more definite responsibilities. The student must meet these requirements by greater industry and application. The primary purpose of thus raising the standards of attainment in the class-room is to arouse the student to more vigorous and persistent mental activity. This activity will have a tonic effect upon him. We will feel the awakening within him of new and higher interests. Gradually he may discover within himself, the ability to do creative intellectual work in some particular sphere and to derive great satisfaction from such achievement. Naturally he will select the vocation which promises the best field for the exercise of this capacity. But this increased emphasis upon study will have other results which, though secondary, are none the less beneficial. Because the best of the student's time and energy are absorbed in his study, he will have little left for idleness and frivolity. There will be less time for loafing, fewer opportunities for mischievous employment. Finally the col- lege student will receive that training in habits of concentration and industry which is a well-nigh indispensable condition of success in the business and professional world. While it is the duty of the college to prepare its students for life under modern conditions, we should not go to the extreme of regarding the college as merely a train- ing school for a business or professional career. The college will not perform its mission best by adopting the methods of business or reproducing the conditions of professional activity. It will continue to do its most valuable work in training voung people for bus- iness, profession, or calling, not by accustoming them to its methods and mechanical routine, but by giving them such breadth of interest and depth of insight as will enable them to distinguish the fundamental and enduring from the accidental and transitory in life and profession, and to resist the narrowing effects of vears of absorption in one sub- iect by holding ever in view the interdependence of all human endeavors and purposes within the one divine world-plan. After all, the chief purpose of the college is to inspire -to awaken in the mind of youth. the vision of the ideal-the ideal of a higher self and a larger life which represents the realization of all that is best in human nature. -HENRY W. WRIGHT. fill ' 7' gig Q.. i.L :T Zh i 1 c I. 51 I8
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Page 26 text:
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I9 in For-Qisrrcia if CHICAGO ALUMNI CLUB This club is composed of men residing in or near Chicago, and consists of alumni and former students of the College. It is organized for the purpose of maintaining college affiliations, and of promoting a strong feeling of interest and devotion among former students of the College. Its standing committees aim to l-:eep in close touch with the various undergraduate organizations. Meetings of the club are held in Chicago on the first Tuesday evening of each month: supper is served at 6:00 o'clock, and is followed by a business meeting and an informal social gathering. The club holds an annual dinner, usually in March, of a more formal character. The annual meeting for the election of officers is held in January. The officers for I9I0 are: President . . . A. O. Jackson, '96, l7Z0 Michigan Ave. Vice-President . . . S. A. Benedict, '88, 3l9 Fifth Ave. Secretary and Treasurer . C. W. Vlfharton. '07, l060 N. Halstead St. NEW YORK ALUMNI ASSOCIATION This Association is composed of the graduates and former students of the College. Academy and Ferry I-lall, who reside in and about the City of New York. Its object is to foster the Lake Forest fellowship and to extend the influence of Lake Forest. The ofhcers for the current year are President ..... . . . Theodore Starrett, '84 Secretary and Treasurer Charles G. Smith, '95, 49 Wall Street. I' f-N 1 1 , 751' Ex out xt - nxt? 4, te 4' Y 1 sl . gifs-I Z0
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