Dickinsonian, November 7, 1929
Cross-country wins Central Pennsylvania Conference cup. Dickinson football loses to Gettysburg. Nineteen freshmen pledge into Belles Lettres.

Cross-country wins Central Pennsylvania Conference cup. Dickinson football loses to Gettysburg. Nineteen freshmen pledge into Belles Lettres.
The Dickinson faculty are listed along with their C.V.s. F. E. Craver denies the Carnegie Foundation's accusation that Dickinson subsidizes athletes beyond tuition costs. Homecoming Weekend.
The Literary Societies plan their rushing program. C. Lincoln Brown is elected vice president of Student Senate.
Athletic Association institutes stricter ticket policy for game admission. Annual college picnic features faculty-student baseball game. Fraternities pledge new members.
Homecoming Weekend is planned. Sororities pledge new members.
Class in archery offered to female students. Freshman class ('33) elects officers.
Daily chapel services abolished; services will only be held on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. George Robert Stephens, Horace A. Rogers, Elmer Charles Herber and E. Winifred Chapman join the faculty. Renovations of Old West are completed. Lovers' Lane is removed. Freshman girls are each assigned five big sisters, one from each sorority and one independent, to introduce them to the college and win their loyalty.
Another year is culminated by graduation and the annual commencement ceremonies. Bradford Oliver McIntire, Professor of English and American Literature, retires after 39 years of service. Former Dickinson president James Henry Morgan returns from a trip abroad.
Sophomore George R. Conners publishes a booklet of verse entitled "Poems of a Shut-In", written by his prominent father during a long period of illness. John Biddle is unanimously chosen as the president of the Men's Senate. Various class reunions are planned for Alumni Day. Preparations continue for the 146th Annual Commencement, including an address by Kentucky Senator Alben William Barkley.
The Alpha Chi Rho fraternity hosts a special reception for Mothers' Day. "The Temple", a magazine of campus verse created by Beau Geste, the Dickinson College poetry club, is ready for print. Harold Kline is elected as the new head of the Intra-fraternity Council. Founder's Day celebrations take place. Meetings are held to discuss campus politics.