As we look back on the events of the Fiftieth Reunion the general opinion seems to be that it was an unqualified success. If the absence of the graduating class reduced the spectacular features the relative calm gave time for renewing more fully the friendships of the years gone by.
The Boston Globe of June 25, in commenting on the Charley Lamprey's retirement as master of the Boston Model School speaks of him as one of the most versatile educators in the School system, a mathematician, naturalist, statistician and poet. He prepared laboratory courses for teachers, systematized spelling methods, and inaugurated many statistical forms in child accounting. The Lampreys have a place in Sudbury—called Oldfields, where they can indulge to the full in the outdoor life they both love so much.
Bill Greger is so modest that most of us never discovered until after the reunion that the Dartmouth Trustees had elected him to Emeritus rank as Professor of Education. This is an unusual honor for one who has been connected with the College for so comparatively short a time but Bill certainly deserved it.
Secretary, Longwood Towers, Brookline, Mass.