ARTIC2LE 1 I Each officer shall be inaugurated at the meeting in which he was elected. • AkTICIE 111. Sec. r.—All regular officers shall be elected at the beginning of each college term. Sec. regular committees not otherwise provided for shall be elected at the beginning of the college year except the baseball and football committees, which shall be elected at the begin ing of the winter term. ARTICLE IV ORDER OF BUSINESS Call to order. Reading of minutes Elections. Inaugurations Reports of committees and officers Regular business. Adjournment A SITE He was a queer fellow—was Jones. Jones of course was not his name ; I only use it to save him embarrassment. Jones was a remarkable man; not brilliant, he never studied, he never worked, he never went into athletics,'but yet he lived and seemed to enjoy himself. If you asked him if he was ever conditioned, he would with pride tell you no. He never made over seventy on an average, however, you would find upon further question ing. He just took things as they came—did Jones ; he was never bothered by debts, nor lessons, professors or girls. He had one failing and that was a love for a show. The moment a play, "a take off," or indeed anything that requir ed a little acting, was suggested, then Jones' blood was up. He was right in for it. He would he the hero, the heroine, the villain and the minister, all in the same play, if he only had half a chance. He would have composed and sung all the songs, have built all the scenery and sold all the tickets TI-IE FREE LANCE. =::= just for an opportunity to tread the stage before an audience A crowd seemed to inspire him. He forgot himself amid the applause of the spectators and became all actor, he awoke from his usual state of lethargy and would go through the most admira ble lot of contortions imaginable. The play end ed and Jones, the actor, became Jones the easy going, Jones the dreamer. Nothing delighted him more than an opportunity to don a new pair of trousers, a Prince Albert coat, a high collar and med tie and then to spread himself in some ludi crous oration for the benefit of some admiring crowd of friends ; nothing pleased him more than a chance to sing to the public a joke on some poor freshman. Whenever you saw him sitting silently on two legs of his chair, with his feet upon the ra diator, and his eyes gazing at nothing, then you knew that Jones had a scheme, not for a piece of machinery, but a parody on something, it mat tered not what, which within a few weeks would be sprung on the unsuspecting public. Jones' room was the loafing place for all college. I spent an evening with him. Old pipes and to bacco boxes were strewn promiscuously on the ta ble, paper-backed novels were strewn everywhere while the window sill, the radiator and all the chairs were covered with visitors. Such guests never saw. They all had their lessons—except their host, and he did not seem at all troubled by the prospect of a total ignorance of his next clays' recitations, He was right in his element ; sur rounded by jovial friends telling excellent stories and marvelous experiences i•n love and war—what better could a man want ; why trouble about the morrow. Thus reasoned Jones, for that was his nature. The visitors did not leave until the elec tric lights went out and then he retired, to sleep, well satisfied with his life and acquaintances. There are plenty such men in all colleges, easy going creatures whose soul ambition is to get through. We see them strolling the campus and lounging around the halls, never taking any appar ent interest in anything excepting an occasional hobby of some sort.