Article

Newcomers Among Our Contributors

FEBRUARY 1930
Article
Newcomers Among Our Contributors
FEBRUARY 1930

CARROLL A. BOYNTON of the class of 1932 is one of the officers of the Dartmouth Aeronautical Society and is handling the publicity which is beginning to mount greatly. His home is in New York City.

ALEXANDER LAING of the class of 1925 has been intimately connected with the literary life of Hanover. He was one of the founders of an undergraduate publication The Tower, and with Richard Lattimore, a classmate, edited a book of poems entitled the ArtsAnthology, published by the Mosher House in Portland, Maine. He has published two books of his own verses, Hanover Poems, and Fool's Errand, and has been doing literary and critical work since leaving college.

PBOFESSOE LEE S. HULTZEN of tlie Department of Public Speaking came to Dartmouth from Cornell in 1926. He is an alumnus of Cornell, and held a post there in the Public Speaking Department from 1923 to 1925. In 1925-26 he was at Washington University. During the summers of 1923, '24, and '25 he took part in the Dramatic Production instruction at Cornell. During the war, as a Ist lieutenant, 311 th Inf., he was wounded in action, and has been decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross, the Cross of Chevalier of the Legion of Honor, and Croix de Guerre.

FBANK C. AYRES is executive secretary of the Business Historical Society, address Soldiers' Field, Boston, Mass. Mr. Ayres writes: "The society will welcome the assistance of Dartmouth Alumni either as contributors of historic business material (particularly that of period before 1900), or as members." The object is to preserve records of American Business which have a historical significance. The collection is housed in the George P. Baker Library of the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration.

ALTON K. MARSTERS '3O of Arlington, Massachusetts, is the author of an article on the past football season. His description of the practices, games, and incidental events of the season and the conclusions he reaches are of interest to every Dartmouth man.