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Page 13 text:
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ina OFC im- 1-ide fling lrest :on- ice, the Kie- lim' :lion one iheir OUXC reg- 1 as len- I I OEQIIIIIIIIDIIIHIIIIIIMIIIIIlllllillllllillllllillllDillllllIDD!Ill!lllllillilllllilillilllll DDZIXIDDDDIIIXIZIHDDl!lllDllDllllP:Q iQQ Q Q !!'U!tl? lil!!! Q In ' O 0 uJ au J u can E annul Q gutauug E OQOII nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnmnnunnnnnunn ozou unuunnn nnmnnnnnnnmunnnnnnnnunnmnnnn o 20 E 2 , ' I ' 1 Q ,... 1909 Sept. I6-21 Examinations for Admission. Sept. 2 l -22 Registration. Sept. 23 Academic year began-Thursday morning. Oct. I4 Inauguration exercises, a holiday. Nov. Z6 Thanksgiving Dayg a holiday. Recess from December 22, 10 a.m., io january 5, inclusive 1910 Jan. 24-Feb.5 First Semester Examinations. Feb. 22 Washington's Birthdayg a holiday. Mar. 8 Town Electiong a holiday. Mar. 23 The Smith and Rollins Prize Speaking. Recess from March 31, I0 a.m., to April 13, inclusive. May 30 Memorial Dayg a holiday. June 9-23 Second Semester Examinations. ' June 20-25 College Entrance Board Examinations. June 25 Speaking for the Barge medal and for the Class of l866 prizes- Saturday, 8 p.m. June 26 Baccalaureate Discourse-Sunday, 10.30 a.m. June 27 Class Day Exercises-Monday, 3 p.m. June 28 Annual Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society-Tuesday, 8.30 a.m. Address--Alumni Association-l 0.30 a.m. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association-2.30 p.m. Greek Letter Society Reunions-5 p.m. ' President's Reception, College l-lall, 9-ll p.m. June 29 Commencement- Last Wednesday in June. Summer Vacation of Twelve Weeks. 1910 Sept. 15-20 Examinations for Admission. Sept. 20-2 l Registration. Sept. 22 Academic year begins-Thursday morning. Dec. 22 Christmas recess begins.
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Page 12 text:
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5 The Aegis, Vol. XXXVIll H MM--A has done for our college. In my opinion his largest, most important, and most enduring achievement has been his ethical impact upon hisassociates in the faculty, and still more the effect of his personality and his teachings upon the younger and more immediately im- pressionable minds composing the undergraduate body. This influence. has been made manifest in all his official and unofficial doings, and most of all in his Sunday evening talks at Rollins Chapel. These have been virtually unique. When a man of the clearest spiritual perceptions is also a master of compact and telling English: and when he unc0n- sciously adds to his verbal message the authority and influence of the president's office, the result is one that cannot be measured or counted. - Every Dartmouth alumnus of the past sixteen years will agree with me that whatever he has got from the class-room, socie- ties, friendships, or the athletic field, nothing quite takes the place, in his tenderest mem- ories of college days, of Dr. Tucker's vesper talks, Sunday after Sunday. To mention their most superficial value, I really believe that they have contributed, more than any one cause, to the numerical increase of the institution. Undergraduates have said to their school friends: He has influenced me. toward good and high thingsg you ought to come and share the influence. D , A nationis greatness lies in men, not acres, sang John Boyle O'Reilly in a preg- nant line. So, looking backward on an administration that we reluctantly mention as belonging to the past, we find with gratitude that its best service still remains, a quicken- ing force, in hundreds of lives that are transmitting its influence to the world. CHARLES F. RICHARDSON. ,. .. ,,..,, , . L6f': fx -S? fiffiffle .- ff. Zzffaffk 5 ' 1-1 - -- -,- J-fh X K t ww .ms 4 Qu- S , 'gg ' -7- ,, -l.,? --- --+ ' -s., 1-,4 - HW,-1.1 14 4.4:-,lf ag . ri, Qi' it : 'N-A Ay iw! I , v'1 ,ff 'I fnjl 31 ' L' .fxf - ,TERM ' .-f 23-' -,..,.. ,N f - 1 IMIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHllllllll lllllllllllllli-f7'F'Lr14.95'256'2 'S f 1'?4!. Sf f 'f g.,ly,t?R.5fj.!,5 '1.,'f' ,- .,,.'-3,,.5ga:--:rl-u:.:1::.m:w'.a::.1.:1: ' HS N5-i'f!1'., 51 2,5-3.99,-25f'9 5' ,, ,gf emlewwfH11'U1f1ff'fi 55533 gi- ,, Q? Z-f ' :f li'1'5'i7FiJ:, : VW ' ' -f .T.T- f E- ' ' ' --.:-L. ,V igfixg 52 jf' f f '25, Ak..-15, . 7, -e ai- -. - . fgfyf .ap A ' .vs -'P i +1 T fi as ,fa-? f fi 4 ' ff-2.225140 'f Q., g , 'ov f ff f1 - 'S 'f?f - L- -1-:,:., ' Jaffa--f v-gf' 'W -7 1 --- - - V , c 1 5-euitfvm P i 7:-F: N 9757- L.-.1lA'k,EL,,---1-gg. ,,yu.4.. .Vi fn, . 191 ............-...........-..--..? Sept. Sept. Sept. Oct. Nov. vlan. Feb. Mar. Mar. May I une J une June J une June June June Sept, gem. CPL Dec.
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Page 14 text:
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8 The Aegis, Vol. XXXVIII Trustees of Dartmouth College' And of Moor's Charity School ERNEST FOX NICHOLS, D.SC., LL.D., President. WILLIAM MARTIN CHASE, LL.D., Clerk of Board ' His Excellency CHARLES MILLER FLOYD fex-oyficioj FRANK SHERWIN STREETER, A.B. CHARLES FREDERICK MATHEWSON, LL.B., A.M. BENJAMIN AMES KIMBALL, B.S. JOHN ROBIE EASTMAN, Ph.D. HENRY HOYT HILTON, A.M. FRANCIS BROWN, D.D., D.Litt. fOxon.j SAMUEL LELAND POWERS, A.B. ROBERT MOORE WALLACE, A.M. LEWIS PARKHURST, A.M. Concord, N. H Manchester, N. H Concord, N. H New York N. Y Concord, N. H Andover, N. H Chicago, Ill New York, N. Y Newton, Mass Milford, N. I-I. Winchester, Nlass Ex-Officio Trustees of the College in relation to Funds given by the State of New Hampshire Councillors Hon. Stephen S. ,Iewett Hon.William H. C. Follansby Hon. Herbert B. Vaill Hon. James D. Upham Hon. Frank P. Brown Laconia, N. H. Exeter, N. H. Keene. N. H. Claremont, N. H. Whiteheld, N. H. i Hon. Hou Hon. Dand Robert Charle Emest
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