We like to think of the Outing Club as typical of our New England forefathers who from Plymouth spread into the wilderness about them, establishing outposts from which they again sallied forth ever unsatiated. Thus does the Outing Club seek new activities and add to her already established departments. Trips of note this spring were those to Mount Washington and the Presidentials (several), Mount Katahdin in Maine, most remote and inaccessible of New England peaks, and the College Grant near the Canadian border. Noticing a seeming increase of entertaining by Cabin and Trail men we became slightly worried until we heard about the two members who with dates at Smith took their sleeping bags along and slept out somewhere in the woods around Northampton. D. O. C. trail markers will be carried this summer into the Swiss Alps, the Pyrenees, Yucatan, the Andes, Norway, and various parts of the United States. Unpretentious, these special trail markers simply show that Dartmouth men carry the spirit of the Outing Club to the four corners of the earth. The Moosilauke Summit Camp on Mount Moosilauke will open its eleventh season extending its hospitality to all Dartmouth hikers and other tourists.
S. A. ADAMS '3O Of Oak Park, 111., who spoke at the Commencement alumni luncheon, repre- senting the seniors