Dartmouth finished in seventh place in the Heptagonals. They were outscored by Yale, Cornell, Army, Penn, Princeton, and Harvard in that order. They managed to nose out Brown and Columbia in the point total. Scorers for the Green in this Ivy League classic were as follows: Nels Ehinger tied for first in the high jump; Captain Tom Richmond took a third in the hammer; Ed Myers came through with a third in the high hurdles; and John Cook got a third in the 100-yard dash. The meet was dominated by the massive hardware twins from Yale-Fuchs and Frank-who managed to throw a variety of assorted iron and steel objects farther than anybody in sight, much to the discomfort of the competing Harvards, Dartmouths, at. al. Except for the participation of a couple of Green contestants in the ICAAAA, this ended the season for the Dartmouth track and field boys.
If Coach Ellie Noyes could get all the runners, jumpers, and throwers that he has had in recent years together at one time, the Green would indeed be a formidable power in this department. But when the weight men have been here, there have been no sprinters, say, and when Dartmouth has been strong in the middle distances, some other group has been under par. The happiest sign on the current horizon, however, is the fact that most of the leading performers this year are sophomores, which gives Coach Noyes something to build on for the future.
AT THE DEDICATION OF THE PAT KANEY PLAQUE in Alumni Gymnasium, June 17, participants in the ceremony included (I to r) President Dickey, Professor Louis C. Mathewson and Richard H. Morton '36, chairman of the memorial committee, who presented the plaque.