Plans are being prepared by Professor Clifford P. Clark, who has just resigned after nine years service in the department of Classical Languages, for the establishment of a secondary school in Hanover.
It will be called the Preparatory School of Intensive Education, and will have the object of tutoring men now in college, as well as preparing boys to enter. The preparatory department contemplates a training so intensive that a student will be able if necessary to prepare himself for college in two years.
The tutoring department will be, in fact, the out-growth of the work that Professor Clark has been engaged in for several summers past, preparing students for the college entrance examinations in the fall, or enabling those who still have entrance requirements to pass off, to qualify for the examinations.
A third feature of the school will be the opportunity that it offers for men in college who are planning to enter the teaching profession to obtain practical experience. These men from the junior or senior classes will work under the supervision of Professor Clark, and if their work is satisfactory, they will receive from him a certificate of recommendation as to their work.
A building near the campus will be obtained for the use of the school.
Professor Clark is a graduate of Wesleyan University in the class of '95, and also holds the degree of Ph. D. from Princeton University. After considerable experience in secondary schools and colleges, he came to the Classical department of Dartmouth in 1910.