26 



THE NKW YORK JOURNAL OF PHARMACY 



some common movement, some j^en- 

 eral .interest, some universal benefit. 

 This Spirit must come from all, Senior, 

 Junior, University man, yea, even the 

 lofty Graduate. 



Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Tues- 

 day, Thursday, Saturday from Septem- 

 ber to May, with two weeks free at 

 Xmas, for two long years, you come 

 to College. Hustle to this lecture, 

 rush for that three hours of laboratory 

 or remain outside of the quiz room as 

 long as possible. The day is over, 

 once more a rush; this the final one 

 of the day, to work or to home, trying 

 to forget for at least twenty-four hours, 

 that College exists, or that there was 

 ever such a person as John Smith, the 

 fellow sitting next to you in Botany 

 or Miss Brown, the grind of Posology. 

 Did it ever occur to you that out of 

 your own section, you were acquainted 

 with a very few students? Moreover, 

 your own section was only one of three 

 of the Junior or Senior Classes? That 

 the days you are not at College, it is 

 just as hustling, bustling, busy bee- 

 hive as on the days you are required 

 to attend? Men and women too — 

 there are other men in other sections 

 and classes who are worth meeting and 

 knowing. No time like the present. 

 Don't wait till after years to meet a 

 man who was in your own College 

 Class, but a different section. Life is 

 short, and it behooves each and every 

 one of us to make the best of all we 

 find in it and of it. But how? 



You say you have no social gather- 

 ings, no athletics, no general clubs ; 

 nothing in short which would tend to 

 bring the student body together. 

 Why have you not these aids, why not 

 monthly gatherings, why not Glees? 



It is up to you, and you alone, why 

 these features are not living ones to- 

 day. Let us forget ourselves for 

 awhile, let us grow unselfish, willing 

 to spare one hour now and then from 

 business, pleasure, study, in order to 

 learn to know x\lma Mater better and 

 at least get on a speaking acquaintance 

 with more than half her eager, hustlhig 

 children. Then and only then will Col- 

 lege Spirit take root, never to be dis- 

 lodged from a firm planting by 1914. 

 1915, 1916. 



May O'Connor, 191G. 



"Get the habit" ! Watch the Journal 

 posters for daily news of happenings 

 at the University and the College. 



Glee Club — Coming. 



Student's Night — Watch the Journal 

 posters. 



SENIOR CLASS ELECTION. 



The early part of December saw the 

 senior class election. After an exciting 

 and strenuous tussle, which resembled 

 the Mexican senate in session, the fol- 

 lowing officers were elected : 



J. Goldstein President 



L. V. Mango Vice-President 



M. H. Dixon Secretarv 



M. Stewart Treasurer 



'T^ax Vobiscum." 



Orchestra — Coming. 



