To-night the senior class holds the most important meeting of its four years course. The class day officers to be chosen should be men well fitted to represent the class ably and with credit. The meeting bids fair to be a protracted one, and the indications seem to point to a session lasting well into the morning hours. This state of affairs is easily explained. Eighty-six differs from many former classes in having several men well fitted for the various positions to be filled, and at the present writing it appears as if every office on the ticket is to be contested by two or more candidates. That the class will vote intelligently and without undue regard for society influence we have no doubt. We venture to predict that the list of officers printed in our columns to-morrow morning will reflect credit on the judgment of the class.
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Politics and Rallies.