Dickinsonian, November 11, 1914
Dramatic Club holds elections.

Dramatic Club holds elections.
David June Carter becomes temporary professor in the Department of Philosophy, Psychology and Education. J. Q. Wood speaks on experiences as Consul to Abyssinia. Phi Kappa Sigma holds annual Founders' Day ride to Pine Grove. Sophomore Senate committee hazes freshmen. Contemporary Club takes ride to Pine Grove Furnace.
Gettysburg College accuses Dickinson of violating athletic contract. Alpha Chi Rho takes annual ride to Doubling Gap. Freshman class election results. Belles Lettres and Union Philosophical Society election results.
Football game with Gettysburg is canceled over squabbles concerning player eligibility. Samuel Higgenbottom, Presbyterian missionary to India, speaks on agricultural improvement in India. Senior class election results. Students engage in impromptu late-night school spirit march.
Annual West College feed is held. Kappa Sigma holds annual fall trip to Mt. Holly.
Occupations and residences of the class of 1914 are listed. Samuel Higgenbottom, a Presbyterian missionary in India, will speak in chapel.
Freshman class is largest to date with 110 students; list of new students and hometowns. Sophomores win flag scrap. YMCA and YWCA hold annual reception for freshmen. John Cleland becomes temporary professor of economics and sociology.
Dickinson is defeated in baseball by the Carlisle Indian School by a scoreline of 6-2. Dickinsonians hope to display their patriotism during wartime (Spanish-American War) by erecting flagstaffs to wave the Stars and Stripes.
The second of the annual Sophomore oratorical contests is held in Bosler Hall under the auspices of the Belles Lettres Literary Society. The 115th annual commencement ceremonies are planned, to include a sermon by President George Edward Reed. The track and field dual meet between Dickinson and the Carlisle Indian School is cancelled due to petty disagreements in methods of arbitration.
A Sophomore oratorical contest is sponsored by the Belles Lettres Society. Students fill the Sentinel Opera House for a series of short plays by their fellow collegiates.