THE AMERICAN-SC AN DIN A VI AN REVIEW 
245 
Hamilton Holt, President of the American- 
SCANDIN AVIAN FOUNDATION 
forma Chapter of The American-Scandi- 
navian Foundation, and 
“WHEREAS they have petitioned the 
Trustees of the American-Scandinavian 
Foundation that a Charter be granted to 
them, be it 
“RESOLVED that the Trustees of The 
American-Scandinavian Foundation em- ' 
power the Secretary to draft such a Charter 
to be signed by the President, Secretary, 
and one member of the Board of Trustees.” 
The JaSiestown Chapter 
At the annual meeting of the Jamestown 
Chapter in the Norden Club on Monday even¬ 
ing, January 30, Clayton M. Jones was 
elected President of the Chapter, Ernest Caw- 
croft, Vice-President, and A. A. Anderson 
Secretary and Treasurer. By an arrange¬ 
ment of reciprocity with the Norden Club, 
members of the Chapter will be admitted to 
membership in the Club. The Club and the 
Chapter will divide responsibility for pro¬ 
grammes of Monday evening meetings. At 
the first of these meetings Mr. Gustav Sundin, 
a former student of Sverige-Amerika Stiftel- 
sen, lectured on “Current Government Prob¬ 
lems in Sweden.” Mr. Jones announced the 
following programme: February 20, “Ex¬ 
periences in International Foundations,” by 
Dr, L. C. Van Noppen; February 27, the 
Birger Sandzen Exhibition with an address 
by Albert Johnson; March 6, “Denmark and 
Her Problems,” by Elmer E. Lutzhoff; March 
13, “A Swede’s Impressions of America,” by 
Herbert Ecklund; March 20, “Finland, Past 
and Present,” by Harold Bloomquist; March 
27, “Sweden and Her People,” by Dr. J. E. 
Hillberg. This is one of the most ambitious 
and interesting schedules of events ever drawn 
up by a Chapter organization. 
The Sandzen Exhibition 
Two of the paintings shown in the Birger 
Sandzen Exhibition will remain for perma¬ 
nent exhibition in New York. Creek at 
Moonrise, painted in Graham County, Kan¬ 
sas, has been acquired for the Brooklyn Mu¬ 
seum, and Wild Horse Creek was pur¬ 
chased by subscription and presented to the 
Foundation. It is hoped that the Foundation 
will have at some time a gallery or reception 
room in which the Sandzen painting can be 
appropriately placed. The contributors to 
the fund were Consul-General Olof H. Lamm, 
Victor Freeburg, J. H. Larson, Henry God¬ 
dard Leach, Mrs. Mads Henningsen, Mrs. 
Carl Cronemeyer, Mrs. Walter M. Weil, Axel 
B. Wallin, Ernst Ohnell, Mrs. G. Thomson 
Parker, Gustav Lange, Jr., C. K. Johansen, 
G. Hilmer Lundbeck, and C. E. Billquist. 
From New York City the exhibition was 
sent to Jamestown, to be shown under the 
auspices of the Chapter during the week of 
February 27. In the spring months it will 
be shown in the Syracuse Museum of Fine 
Arts and the Memorial Gallery of Rochester 
University. In the fall it will be placed on a 
circuit of New England and southern cities. 
A Junior League 
For March 31, the Junior League of the 
New York Chapter has announced a dance 
at the Hotel Majestic. The officers of the 
League are Miss Margaret Drewsen, Presi¬ 
dent; Miss Hedvig Eskesen, Secretary; and 
Miss Ellen Stilling, Treasurer. Associates of 
the Foundation or members of families as¬ 
sociated with the Foundation are eligible for 
membership in the League, which has about 
fifty charter members. 
