In This Issue
18 CITIZEN SOLDIERS
Did the critics and the war kill ROTC, or is there—as the author suggests—life off campus?
22 PEREGRINE SUMMER
Studying peregrine falcons on a 700-foot cliff in Greenland offers a somewhat uncommon answer to "what did you do over vacation?"
26 ONE HUNDRED MASTER DRAWINGS
An exhibition, opening at Hopkins Center at the end of this month, that 'makes smithereens of the Tenth Commandment.'
32 ALUMNI ALBUM—46
Two more profiles in the series about interesting Dartmouth men,
Dartmouth Authors 8
Afternoons with Frost 12
The 1973-74 Alumni Council 13
The College 15
The Undergraduate Chair 25
Endowed Professorships 31
Big Green Teams 34
Club Reports 37
Class Notes 39
Ivy Football Preview 49
Alumni Fund Report 81
Obituaries 95
The Cover
A steel helmet and a mortarboard suggest the conflicts raised by campus military training, an issue discussed in an article beginning on page 18. Photograph by Adrian Bouchard. Left: a detail from Salvador Dali's Rhinoceros, one of the drawings in an exhibition put together by Franklin Robinson of the Art Department. No one has suggested that this endangered species—of powerful horn, thick hide, and limited intelligence —be the new College symbol.