Dickinson Alumnus, July 1963

Selected Highlights from this Issue
  • Chaplin Samuel H. Magill discussed Rev. Martin Luther King's letter from the Birmingham Jail in his Baccalaureate sermon. Magill called King's letter an "eloquent plea for human rights."
  • The new female dormitory was completed and named Adams Hall in honor of Rolland Adams (class of 1927), who donated $250,000 towards the building's construction.
  • The College ended its lease at Metzger Hall and held a formal ceremony at which the key was turned over to the Metzger Estate Board of Trustees.
  • Thirty seven members of the Senior class were commissioned second lieutenants in the United States Army Reserves.
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Dickinson Alumnus, April 1963

Selected Highlights from this Issue
  • Letters from William Princeton Willey (Class of 1862) revealed what student life was like at Dickinson during the early years of the Civil War.
  • Mike Silver (class of 1954), who worked at ABC News, described the benefits of a Liberal Arts education.
  • The General Alumni Association presented their revised Constitution and By-Laws, which were adopted in October 1962.
  • Alpheus S. Mowbray (class of 1885), Dickinson's oldest living alumnus, died at the age of 104 in December 1962.
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Dickinson Alumnus, February 1963

Dickinson Alumnus, February 1963
Selected Highlights from this Issue
  • This special issue, titled "Blueprints for a Community of Learning," focused on the future of Dickinson and the future of higher education in general.
  • The College presented plans for a new student union and new men's fraternity residences located between West Louther and West High Streets.
  • The Alumnus joined 300 other alumni magazines in printing a report entitled "The College of Tomorrow."
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Dickinson Alumnus, October 1962

Selected Highlights from this Issue
  • The Alumnus published the first of a two-part history of the Dickinson football team. This article focused on the period from 1885 to 1911.
  • Philip Gardiner Nordell discussed how the College used lotteries in the late 1700s to raise money in "The City Hall and Dickinson College Lottery."
  • Dickinson admitted the largest student body yet in fall 1962, with a total of 1,144 full time students.
  • Walter Rosenstein (class of 1962) received the first Amy Loveman Award, a national contest with a $1,000 prize.
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