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JUNIOR DINNER.

A Most Satisfactory Social Meeting of the Class.

The '98 Junior Dinner given last night at the Vendome, was in every way an unqualified success. The attendance was larger than at any previous Junior Dinner, and the whole affair was pervaded with a spirit of class loyalty and good fellowship, which speaks eloquently for the future of the class and of the University.

C. Grilk's speech in answer to the toast "The Class" was an admirable tribute to the feeling of comradeship which alone can unite the varying types of men into a compact whole, standing together for better or worse. The other speakers amplified the same theme.

A striking feature of the entertainment was an unusually clever poem by R. P. Utter, full of personal allusions. Songs by Woodruff and Scull alternated with the speeches.

The announced speakers, with their subjects were C. Grilk, "the Class;" D. M. Goodrich, "the Crew;" N. W. Cabot, "the Football Team;" F. Dobyns, "Debating;" C. E. Morgan 3d, "the Press;" and R. P. Utter, the Poem. G. Newell, ex-secretary of the class, who left at the beginning of the year, was present and spoke, and G. H. Scull read an apt toast to the class, in verse.

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