The Spring number of the Bulletin of theAudubon Society of New Hampshire contains The Peregrine Falcon and Its Eyrie, a CameraStudy of Falco peregrinus anatum During theBreeding Season, by Professor Charles A. Proctor 'OO. These very fine and interesting camera studies begun in this issue will be continued in several later numbers of the Bulletin.
Professor Daniel Marx Jr. is the author of Trans-Pacific Transportation, appearing in the April 9th issue of Far Eastern Survey.
Recent publications of Professor Trevor Lloyd are: Frontier of Destiny The CanadianArctic, vol. 6, no. 7 of Behind the Headlines, a pamphlet of 16 pages; Arctic Air Transport, reprinted from the December issue of AirAffairs, and Canada's Strategic North, appearing in the Spring issue of International Journal.
Professor Dimitri S. Von Mohrenschildt is the author of American Intelligentsia AndRussia of the N. E. P. which appears in the April issue of Russian Review.
The 6th edition of the College Omnibus edited by Professor James D. McCallum et al, has recently been published by Harcourt, Brace & Co. In this edition many changes have been made in the essays, short stories and drama sections.
Professor Benfield Pressey has contributed 13 articles on various literary subjects to the forthcoming Collier's Encyclopedia.
Recent publications of Professor Gordon F. Hull Jr. '33 are: Diffraction Patterns of Microwave Paraboloid Antennas, reprinted from the March-April issue of American Journal ofPhysics, and Resonant Circuit Modulator forBroad Band Acoustic Measurements, reprinted from the December issue of the Journal of Applied Physics.
Carrousel for Bibliophiles . . . edited by William Targ, contains a chapter by Christopher Morley entitled Reperusal. This chapter contains a favorable comment on Professor Herbert F. West's '22 book Modern Book Collecting for the Impecunious Amateur, published a few years since. As a matter of fact, the chapter is almost a review of this valuable publication.
"I am very Jealous that instead of your Seminary Becoming Alma Mater she wll be too Alba Mater to suckle the Tawnees . wrote
Samson Occom, star Indian pupil, to his former teacher, Eleazar Wheelock, shortly after the founding of Dartmouth College as an Indian school in 1769. Occom's prediction came true.