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Page 21 text:
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Alumni Association. OFFICERS. A. B. Freyer, ’05. President. Miss Ruby Dean Bransford, 03. Vice-President. Harry Howard, ’97. Secretary-Treasurer. THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION. The Alumni Association of the Louisiana Industrial Institute was organized as an association in 1899. The school itself was organized in 1895, and in 1897 its first graduate took his degree. Since those days, many changes have taken place; the school has grown and taken its place with other institutions for higher education in the State and the South; the Alumni Association has grown with the school, year by year being reinforced with the new life and new spirit of each succeeding graduating class. The Association in the beginning directed its attention more strongly to the social entertainment of its members, bringing them together annually in a public program and an Association banquet. The business meeting was a mere formality for the purpose of electing officers. The Association seemed to have no serious purpose, no definite aim in its organization, and its members drifted in spirit fur¬ ther and further away from it. The Association and the school seemed to have no other bonds than those few of its members who were teaching in the school. So much for our organization of yesterday. Today we are confronted with a new condition of affairs. The Association is composed of two hundred and twelve strong, active and enthusiastic members, men and women, who represent the citizenship of our land and who aid in the direction of its affairs. We have among us, men and women who are representative of all that is good and noble, men and women who have become directors of destinies, men and women who reflect credit upon themselves, upon the Association and upon the school. The Association now stands for more than the annual program, banquet and formal election of officers: it stands as representative of a school which, by per¬ sistent effort, has come to be recognized as a power in the educational world. It represents a school which, as a producer of men and women, citizens, factors in 17
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Page 20 text:
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LAGNIAPPE STAFF—1910. Dan McLure (Senior-2) .. . Wharton Brooks (Senior-i) Allie Thurmon (Senior-2) Harry Howard (Class 97) Louie Donnan (Senior-2).. Lola Tims (Senior-2) . Clyde Mobley (Senior-i) .. J. P. Sealey ( Jnnior-2) .... Bennie Kendall (Senior-2) Ardis Marbury (Senior-i). J. M. McCaskill (Senior-2) Sallie Robison . Lela Tait . J. D. Stephenson. Lamar Colvin . H. W. Kane. ROSS ZuBERBIER. Laurence Galiagan . Lane O’Neal . Douglas Smith . . Business Manager. . Asst. Business Manager. . Editor-in-Chicf. . Alumni Editor. . Art Course Editor. . Music Course Editor. . . .Domestic Science Course Editor. . Mechanic Arts Course Editor. . Business Course Editor. . Humorous Editor. . Athletic Editor. Senior Class, ’093 2 Representative. . Senior-i Class Representative. . Junior-2 Class Representative. . . . .Junior-1 Class Representative. Sophomore-2 Class Representative. .Sophomore-i Class Representative. .Freshman-2 Class Representative. .Freshman-1 Class Representative. .Preparatory Class Representative. LAGNIAPPE FACULTY COMMITTEE. W. P . Hale. Lena Christian. Martha Barrow. Harry Howard. R. Q Oliver. 16
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Page 22 text:
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the world ' s work, knows no superior in the South; a school where hand and heart join in doing the bidding of the trained mind. The school owes no thanks to the Association for this development, but we hope a new era has begun in which its development will be so interwoven and united with the efforts of the Association as to identify the advance of the one with the growth of the other. The activities of the Association are becoming material and worthy of sup¬ port. A scholarship of $100.00 has been given this year to a former student who would otherwise have been compelled to leave the school and lose a year while making enough money to continue. This scholarship will be continued at all costs, and if possible two or more such scholarships will be given next year. The funds for this undertaking are obtained from the memberships of the Association in the shape of dues of $1.50 per annum. The Association no longer satisfies itself with the encouragement of socia¬ bility among its members. That there should exist a strong feeling of fellowship and friendship is essential, but we are beginning a new era in which an effort is being earnestly made to make the Association a strong central figure around which will be grouped individual activity directed earnestly and zealously toward the upbuilding of the L. I. I. 18
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