The time draws near when the rooms of the undergraduates in the yard are to be given up to senior spreads. The undergraduates have for three years spent time and care adorning these private castles. The daily care of the "goodies" has crowned the efforts of the occupants. They are obliged to leave them to the mercies of Class Day crowds. When they come back to them in the fall, the complaints are frequent in regard to the state in which their rooms are left. It seems absurd to have to speak upon such a subject, but if the temporary occupants would use the ordinary care they do upon their own rooms, there would be no need of this.
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A Festivus for the Rest of Us