An innovation appears in the constitution of the last two senior classes that promises a substantial aid to the College as well as closer and more continuous contact on the part of the alumni. This new feature is the so-called Twenty-fifth Reunion Fund. The class of 1914 makes the following provisions for the payment by members of the class: each member shall contribute for the first five years $2.00, for the second five years $5.00, for the third five years $8.00, and for the last ten years $10.00 per year. In the case of 1914, if these payments were adhered to, this fund has been estimated to produce on maturity, about $35,000.
As the money is collected year by year by the class treasurer, it will be turned over to the trustees of Dartmouth College, who will invest it in the name of the class, but preserving the fund as an entity. The class has voted to turn over the absolute control and ownership of the fund "to the College at its twenty-fifth reunion, reserving the right to condition the gift as it sees fit.