The American-Scandinavian Foundation 
For better intellectual relations between the American and Scandinavian peoples, by means 
of an exchange of students, publications, and a Bureau of Information — 
Officers: President, Hamilton Holt; Vice Presidents, John G. Bergquist and John A. Gade; 
Treasurer, H. Esk. M oiler; Acting Secretary, James Creese; Counsel, Henry E. Alm- 
berg; Auditors, David Elder & Co. 
Government Advisory Committees: Danish—A. P. Weis, Chief of the Department of the 
Ministry of Education, Chairman; Norwegian—K. J. Hougen, Chief of the Department 
of Church and Education, Chairman. The Swedish Government is represented in the 
Swedish American Foundation (below). 
Co-operating Bodies: Sweden —Sverige-Amerika Stiftelsen, Malmtorgsgatan 5, Stockholm, 
Svante Arrhenius, President; E. E. Ekstrand, Secretary; Denmark —Danmarks Amerikan- 
ske Selskab, 18 Vestre Boulevard, H. P. Prior, President; N. L. Feilberg, Secretary; 
Norway —Norge-Amerika Fondet, L. Strandgade 1, Christiania, K. J. Hougen, Chairman. 
Students’ Tour in 1922 
The Students’ Tour in 
the summer of 1922, an¬ 
nounced in the last num¬ 
ber of the Review, will 
be the first visit of a 
large group of American 
students to the Scandi¬ 
navian countries. The 
students and instructors 
in American colleges and universities who en¬ 
roll for this trip will sail from New York 
July 1 and will return sixty-three days later, 
having toured by train, boat and automobile 
through Denmark, Norway and Sweden, hav¬ 
ing visited the chief cities of the North, and 
Berlin and Paris as well. They will do this 
with less expense, with less trouble, and with 
more pleasure and profit than would be pos¬ 
sible under any other conditions. 
The Scandinavian tour will be under the 
immediate auspices of the American-Scandi¬ 
navian Foundation, while three tours to other 
countries, also included in the groups of Inter¬ 
national Students’ Tours, will be under the 
auspices of other international associations. 
The Institute of International Education has 
given its endorsement to the whole program. 
The four groups will sail on the Cunard liner 
Saxonia, which has been especially chartered 
for them, and the Scandinavian group will 
land at Hamburg July 13. 
The Itinerary 
Crossing Slesvig by rail, they will catch 
glimpses of some of those “Historic Corners” 
described by Asmus Diemer in the Review 
of last March, and they will stop at Ribe. 
Afterwards they will call at Odense on the 
way to Copenhagen, where four days will be 
spent in sight-seeing. Afternoon trips will 
be made to Frederiksborg and Elsinore. By 
way of Goteborg they will go to Christiania, 
where one afternoon will be taken up with 
an excursion to Holmenkollen; and from 
Christiania they will go by rail to Bergen 
July 24. The course for the next few days 
calls for every kind of vehicle but the aero¬ 
plane : 
July 25—In Bergen; to Floien; to Voss 
July 26—By auto to Eide; by steamer on 
the Sorfjord to Odda 
July 27—To Voss again; to Stalheim 
July 28—By carriage to Gudvangen; by 
steamer on the Sognefjord to 
V adheim 
July 29—By carriage to Nedre Vasenden 
and 
July 30—To Sandene 
July 31—By steamer on the Nordfjord to 
Visnaes; by automobile to Helle- 
sylt; by steamer on the Geirang- 
erfjord to Merok 
August 2—By steamer on the Geiranger- 
fjord and Moldefjord to Molde 
August 4—By auto to Dombaas. 
From Dombaas they will cross the Dovrefjaell 
by the new railroad to Trondhjem, the north¬ 
ern limit of the tour; and from Trondhjem 
they will go on into Sweden, passing from 
Ostersund through bleak highlands, forest- 
clad hills, and cultivated plains to Uppsala 
and Stockholm. After four days in Stock¬ 
holm, they will visit Trollhattan and its 
waterfalls, Lund and its cathedral and 
university, and Malmo. August 16 will be 
spent in Berlin, and on the 18th the group 
