During the last three days of February, the Dartmouth Outing Club played host to sixty-one skiers of the Intercollegiate Outing Club Association. Colleges represented at Spy Glass Hill, near Moosilauke and Warren, N. H., were: Yale, Vassar, Middlebury, Smith, Skidmore, Harvard. Radcliffe, Mount Holyoke, M. I. T. and Dartmouth. J. W. Brown '37 organized and executed the plans for the entire week end. Peggy and Ford Sayre provided genial hospitality and plenty of good food for the trail-wearied visitors. While the visiting delegations slept both nights in the accommodations at Spy Glass, most of the Dartmouth representatives bunked at the D. O. C. Great Bear and Glencliff Cabins on the opposite side of the mountain.
The first day's program, since visitors kept arriving from noon until after midnight, consisted of skiing on the open slope of Spy Glass Hill, followed by a hearty songfest of mixed voices which lasted far into the night. The greater part of the following day was spent on Hell's Highway. That afternoon a number of the party climbed to the South Peak and skied across the ridge of the mountain to the Winter Cabin, where history of four years ago repeated itself in the informal gathering of the various Outing Clubs. It was on a similar occasion, at the same spot in the spring of 1932, that an intercollegiate meeting was held in which representatives of eight college clubs had convened and founded the I. O. C. A.