Today the sale of tickets for Class Day begins for Seniors, and we would again call the attention of members of the Class of Ninety-six to the regulations of the committee, which are published in another column. It is imperative that these directions be followed implicitly if Class Day is to be the success that every one hopes it will be. The rule that the tickets are not to be sold by any Senior after they have left the hands of the committee is perhaps the most important of all, and the one that will be most relentlessly enforced. The committee has, and will certainly use, the power of stopping at the gate the holder of any ticket that it discovers has been sold. It is a simple matter for the committee to follow the tickets, as each one is numbered and the name of the original purchaser taken.
The Senior Class is especially subject to criticism in the matter of negligence and thoughtlessness in fulfilling the various class duties which are required of it, and it must be confessed that adverse criticism is often deserved. In general we may say that Ninety-six has shown itself an admirable Class in this respect, and has left little undone that could have been desired. There is one matter, however, and an important one, which has not received the attention that it merits, and that is the handing in to the secretary of the Class lives. The secretary has published a final notice to those who have thus far neglected to give him their Class lives, asking that they give the matter their immediate attention. His request should receive a prompt response if Ninety-six has any pride in preserving suitable records of its members.
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PROPERTY FOR HARVARD COLLEGE.