Article

SENIORS CONTRIBUTE TO ALUMNI FUND

August 1921
Article
SENIORS CONTRIBUTE TO ALUMNI FUND
August 1921

he senior class has adopted the proposition of an annual subscription of $10 to the Alumni Fund, payable semi-annually for each pledge signed. This pledge will be considered as only a minimum contribution, and it will in no way curtail further subscription.

Expansion, not in numbers but in the scope and breadth of the field covered, has characterized the past undergraduate year. New organizations have been few. Only one The Green Key, already is sure of finding a permanent place in student affairs; and this is not what is ordinarily meant by the phrase "nonathletic activity." To survey the year best it would be well to take the various branches of activity and see what has been done.

The musical clubs did not expand; there must be a limit to all good things and a 14-day trip to Chicago and back during spring recess ought to be enough to satisfy anyone The great expansion in the field of Dartmouth music was the college band. Here was an organization made up entirely of students and trained and led by a student—an organization which made so favorable an impression at the games and mass meetings that a concert was given and later a three-day trip undertaken with the utmost success. This was the most marked innovation of the year.