GUIDE......10th edition. Published by The Appalachian Mountain Club. p. xii 566. 12.25. Edited by Charles W. Morse '24.
The editor of this latest edition of the familiar "A. M. C." guide to the White Mountains, for years the bible of those who use the trails of New Hampshire, when an undergraduate was a student assistant in the Library and interested in the Outing Club. Now in his leisure he is being of service to those hikers and climbers who need a clear and accurate guide book. Dr. Larrabee, who edited previous editions, set an almost impossibly high standard, and Morse is doing his best to carry on. Doubtless there are errors and omissions, but a casual glance discovers no more than are to be expected in a job of such dimensions which depends largely on information received from many sources, not all of which can be checked in one's spare time.
Volume 12 of Collected Papers from theDepartment of Biology of The School ofHygiene and Public Health of the JohnsHopkins University contains the following articles by Raymond Pearl '99: Biologyand Human Trends, reprinted from the Journal of the Washington Academy ofSciences, vol. 25, 1935; Human Biology inSchools and Colleges reprinted from vol-4.2, 1935 of School and Society; Birth Ratein Recent Years. Its Steady Decline and theConsequences, reprinted from The WorldToday, vol. 3, 1935; A Biometric Study ofthe Endocrine Orga?is in Relation to Mental Disease. Part 1 and 2 in collaboration with Marjorie Gooch and Walter Freeman, reprinted from vol. 7, 1935 of Human Biology.
Mr. Pearl is also the author of ThirdProgress Report on a Study of FamilyLimitation which has been reprinted from The Milbane Memorial Fund Quarterly for July.
Outline History of Landscape Architecture Parts 1-2, 1936 by Bremer W. Pond 'O7 has been published by the School ofLandscape Architecture, Harvard University.
An article by Sherwood Trask 'll SocialScience in the Curriculum of the Experimental High School appears in the April number of 69 Bank Street.
H. W. Higman '06 has an article Adventures in a Rubber Boat which appears in Outdoor Life for May.
The May number of the New Hampshire Troubador contains an article by Edward B. Stanford '31 entitled Reunion inthe Hills.
The National Geographic Magazine for May contains an article Butterflies—Tryand. Get Them by L. I. Hewes '98.
A. E. Gordon '23 is the author of an article published by the University of California entitled Epigraphica: 2, on Marbleas a Criterion for Dating Republican LatinInscriptions.
The June number of Transition contains two poems by Richard G. Eberhart '26, Alphabet Book and Mais I'amour infini me montera dans I'ame.
The issue of Poetry for June contains three poems by Samuel F. Morse '36 as follows: Fracture of Light, Vision of aWoman, and Message Found in a Skull. Mr. Morse also has a poem in the New Republic for April 15 entitled Emily Dickinson.
The Geographical Journal for June contains an article by Richard P. Goldthwait '33 entitled Seismic Sounding on SouthCrillon and Klooch Glaciers.
Books we like Sixty-Two Answers to theQuestion: "Please choose, and give reasonsfor your choice, ten books, exclusive of theBible and Shakespeare, Dictionaries, Encyclopedias, and other ordinary referencebooks, that you believe should be in everypublic library," with a preface by Edward Weeks, has been published by the Massachusetts ibrary Association. In this volume Ben Ames Williams 'lO gives his choice of ten books and Robert Frost '96 also gives his list with reasons for the choice.
Pitch Man by William Cunningham 'l9 appears in Collier's for June 20. The Creator of Uncle Remus by Jason A. Russell '2O appears in the June issue of The Connecticut Teacher.
J. W. E. Glattfeld 'O7 and Duncan Macmillan are the authors of Lactones inLiquid Amtnonia reprinted from Journalof the American Chemical Society.
Shanghai in the Taiping Period by Earl Cranston 'l6 has been reprinted from ThePacific Historical Review for June.