President Hopkins addressed a meeting of the chapter presidents of the 24 fraternities at Dartmouth at a feed at Moose Cabin before exams.
Nils W. Horstadius, former exchange student in Tuck School from Sweden, related his impressions of America and American colleges to a sizable audience in Tuck School recently.
Whiting Williams, back in Hanover to teach his five weeks' course in the Tuck School, has a whole new string of experiences to draw upon after some months in the West Virginia coal mining region.
Twenty-seven members of the class of 1925 reported for the six weeks' competition for the position of publicity manager of the Players and Musical Clubs.
Thirty-five freshmen entered the second competition for positions on the editorial staff of The Dartmouth recently. Either one or two men will be chosen from this group in the early part of April for the board.
There has recently enrolled at Dartmouth a young Russian student, son of General Shvetzoff, who for 29 years was a high officer in the Russian army. Young Shvetzoff served for two years in the Russian army in civil warfare. He speaks fluently Russian, English, French, German, Ukrainian, Polish, Bohemian, and Serbian.
Professor Longhurst and Mr. Cronham helped to take the mind of the college from horrible realities every day during the exam period with delightful half hour organ recitals.
Since the beginning of the second semester May Korb, soprano, and Sonia Paeff Silverman, pianist, have offered delicacies in the way of beautiful recitals to the college.
In place of its customary private lecture at the annual mid-winter banquet the Phi Beta Kappa society has engaged Hugh Walpole, the brilliant English critic and novelist, for a talk in Dartmouth Hall to which the public is invited.
The Glee Club has permanently cut its membership to thirty-two men, so that in the future nearly all men enrolled will make the trips. This truly wise move will doubtless result in better and more unified singing.
The Glee Club, accompanied by the Inn Trio, journeyed to Concord, N. H. recently to give a concert there under the auspices of the Concord Alumni Association.
Pi Delta Epsilon, the journalistic fraternity, recently elected Prof. David Lambuth, G. S. Anderson '24, and C. J. Spaulding '24 to its membership.
C. A. Knudson '24 was elected president of the Cercle Francais for the second semester.
Dr. Louis Bell '84, noted inventor and electrical engineer, was secured by the Dartmouth Scientific Association and the Dartmouth chapter of the Gamma Alpha National Graduate Scientific Society to speak at their joint meeting February 21.
B. Smith Jr., '25 was unanimously re-elected president of the Radio Club. R. C. Carlton '23 was elected secretary, and S. C. Bird '24 was re-elected to the position of treasurer last month.
C. F. Gordon '23 will represent the Dartmouth chapter of Pi Delta Epsilon at the 1923 convention at Appleton, Wis., in March.
Bitter cold sharpened by a 60-mile gale met the party of 14 from Dartmouth which attempted to scale Mount Washington in the latter part of February. Five of the party succeeded in reaching the top by dint of much hard work, good ice creepers, and strong ropes.