A letter was received recently from one of the two remaining members of the class of 1903 (both listed above). Stanwood Cobb wrote as follows about his autobiography A Saga ofTwo Centuries, recently published on the occa- sion on his 98th birthday:
"I [made] some mention in Saga of the Progressive Education Association, which I founded in 1920 and directed for some ten years. . . . The second phase of my life work has been in the field of the Baha'i World Faith, which I joined in 1906, and I have been permanently active in it ever since. My books Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Security for aFailing World have been chief textbooks in this field.
"I have had a very interesting life, covering a unique period . . . during which time I saw the rise and fall of three world empires and the obsolescence of simple village life, with its replacement by the technological urbanization of today."
He concluded by expressing his "gratitude to Dartmouth, which enabled me to obtain the necessary college education."
HOWARD L. ROPES