The Scientific Monthly for October, 1930, contains an article by Dr. William Patten, entitled "The Ways of Man, Apes and Fishes."
"Can Religion Recapture the Campus?" by Reverend R. B. Chamberlin, appears in the issue of the Christian Century for October 29, 1930.
"Thomas B. Reed, Parliamentarian," by Professor William A. Robinson, has been published by Dodd, Mead & Company. This book will be reviewed in a later issue of the MAGAZINE.
The second volume in the series of "Creative Lives," edited by Professor H. E. B. Speight, has just appeared. This is the Life of Phillips Brooks by Bishop Lawrence, published by Harper and Brothers.
"Education and Life," an address delivered at Milton Academy last year by President Ernest Martin Hopkins, has been published by Houghton Mifflin and Company. This book will be reviewed in a later issue of the MAGAZINE.
Dr. Louis Clark Mathewson is the author of "Elementary Theory of Finite Groups." This book, issued under the editorship of Professor J. W. Young, is published by Houghton Mifflin and Company.
Professor J. W. Young is the author of "Projective Geometry," published by the Mathematical Association of America (Carus Mathematical Monograph No. 4). This is published by the Open Court Publishing Company. He is also the author of "Lectures on Fundamental Concepts of Algebra and Geometry"; prepared for publication with the cooperation of William Wells Denton, with a note on "Growth of Algebraic Symbolism" by Ulysses Grant Mitchell. This is published by Macmillan and Company, New York.
Eugene Francis Clark, long-time secretary and professor of the College until his death February 21, had brought to the final stages of completion the life of his father, "Francis E. Clark." The volume is published by the Williston Press, Boston. A foreword is contributed by Mrs. Francis E. Clark and another son, Sydney Clark, who appended a final chapter and saw the work through its period of publication.
This biography, important because of its significance in the field of religion and because of its Dartmouth connections, will be reviewed in January.