HENRY B. THAYER, '79, author of THIS NEW LIBRARY, is chairman of the Committee of the Trustees on the Development of the Physical Plant. Mr. Thayer tells a story that should interest all Dartmouth Men.
ERNEST MARTIN HOPKINS, '01, President of DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, delivered the address at the exercises opening the 160th year of the College, in Webster Hall on the morning of September 20,1928. The address is printed in full.
E. GORDON BILL, Dean of Freshman, and Director of Admissions, has been in that position since 1919. He is an alumnus of Acadia University and took his A. M. and Ph. D. at Yale. During the War he was Director of Military Service in Canada, in charge of the Canadian Selective Draft.
MARSHALL SCHACHT, '27, is one of the younger school of Dartmouth poets. His poems have appeared in a number of high grade periodicals. At present he is continuing his studies at Harvard.
THE AUTHOR of the poem, "How the Students Saved the College," may be any one of a number of versifiers in College in the period 1900-1905. Much of the poetry of that time was written by the late Elliot P. Frost, the late Charles J. (Cap) Kelly, H. R. Blythe and Stanwood Cobb.
Next Month and To Come
THE STORY OF AN INDIAN, by Samson Occom; pictures of the life of Moor's Charity School and Dartmouth College more than 150 years ago. WHAT THE COLLEGE IS DOING,—An analysis of the College's intellectual life by Chairmen of various departments. A REPORT OF THE CHICAGO Pow Wow, A REVIEW OF THE FOOTBALL SEASON, and a number of other features.