. The mirage . k Beiriger, Gerald Bently, Mark Bills, Morris Bridwell, KennethBuchanan, John Cady, L. S. Cole, Robert Cornthwaite, Gilbert Darnell, RussellDeCoursey, Maurice Elliott, Austin Ellmore, Edward Ewing, Wendell Godwin,Walter Gregory, Samuel Hanna, James Hassett, Lewis Horton, Halford Houser,Wilbur Jones, Fred Linville, Neil Little, Marion Lynch, Harold Martin, ThomasMiddleton, Albert Paschen, Cohen Pierson, Dwight Pitkin, Ralph Plessinger,William Read, Harold Robbins, Owen Robinson, Louis Rosenberg, BenjaminRufe, Dewey Sanders, Edwin Sayre, Cecil Smith, Emerson Smith, Delbert Smith,W


. The mirage . k Beiriger, Gerald Bently, Mark Bills, Morris Bridwell, KennethBuchanan, John Cady, L. S. Cole, Robert Cornthwaite, Gilbert Darnell, RussellDeCoursey, Maurice Elliott, Austin Ellmore, Edward Ewing, Wendell Godwin,Walter Gregory, Samuel Hanna, James Hassett, Lewis Horton, Halford Houser,Wilbur Jones, Fred Linville, Neil Little, Marion Lynch, Harold Martin, ThomasMiddleton, Albert Paschen, Cohen Pierson, Dwight Pitkin, Ralph Plessinger,William Read, Harold Robbins, Owen Robinson, Louis Rosenberg, BenjaminRufe, Dewey Sanders, Edwin Sayre, Cecil Smith, Emerson Smith, Delbert Smith,William Strain, George Study, James Sullender. Next year it is expected thatthere will be at least one hundred and fifty. And by the end of the fourth yearmost if not all the four hundred Scholarships will be taken advantage of. Onlyhe who can estimate the results of having in perpetuity four hundred young mengiven the advantage of a liberal education can comprehend the good of this Founda-tion. H. B. Longden 15. M ilemoriam Perhaps never did a keener sense of sorrow and loss settle over the wholecampus than at the death of a man much beloved and Idiolized by DePauw,Colonel James Riley Weaver, scholar, teacher, soldier, and diplomat. In 1867, after receiving the degrees of A. B., , and , he took a profes-sorship at West Virginia University. Two years later he entered the diplo-matic service and for sixteen years held consulships to Italy, Belgium, and Aus-tria. He then came to DePauw, where he taught several years, always the ob-ject of the admiration and love of both students and faculty. In 1917 he retiredas Professor Emeritus of Political Science, and on January 28, 1920, the victimof advancing years and heart trouble, he unexpectedly and quietly passed away. IG


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