The Central High School of Omaha, Nebraska, is the winner of the Dartmouth' Plaque which is awarded each year to the secondary school whose delegation of three or more men in the freshman class gets the highest average scholastic standing during the first semester. The Central High School of four men attained an average scholastic record of only slightly below "B," according to an announcement by E. Gordon Bill, dean of freshmen and director of admissions. This high-ranking delegation is composed of Stephen P. Dorsey, F. Lowell Haas, Samuel Rees 111, and Frank J. Wright.
Other schools with delegations of three or four men in the class of 1935 ranking next to the Omaha High School in scholastic standing were : Taft School, of Watertown, Connecticut; Erasmus Hall High School, of Brooklyn, New York; Glenville High School, of Cleveland, Ohio; Cranbrook School, of Bloomfield Hills, Michigan; Albany High School, of Albany, New York; and Montclair High School, of Montclair, New Jersey.
Since 1926 the Central High School of Omaha, this year's winner of the Dartmouth Plaque, has sent twenty men to Dartmouth, who have had an unusual first semester average midway between "B" and "C," and not one of whom have failed in any course.