TICKETS to the Yard were issued yesterday.
THE Crew rowed on time last Wednesday.
THE Bursar intends to go abroad this summer.
CHURCH and prayer certificates are due next Monday.
NO more games with Princeton can be played this season.
SIXTY-EIGHT members of the Senior Class intend to become lawyers.
SENIORS are requested to send in their Class lives as soon as possible.
Class of '78 will entertain the Class of '79 at Commencement, in 9 Holworthy.
REV. DR. PEABODY is expected to preach at Newport during the summer.
THE papers and magazines that belong to the Reading Room are for sale.
PROFESSOR C. C. EVERETT is to be the Orator at Commencement at Bowdoin.
IT is an "unwritten rule of the Faculty" that to whisper in Chapel is a criminal offence.
THERE were 355 Senior and 375 Junior candidates at the Oxford local examinations for women.
THE Signet Strawberry Night will be held at the Society rooms on Monday evening at eight o'clock.
THE University Crew will leave for New London on the evening of the 19th inst., by the Providence road.
MR. HOWARD M. TICKNOR, Instructor in Elocution, has been nominated U. S. Consul at Carrara, Italy.
SIR EDWARD THORNTON will be here on Class Day, and the Duke of Argyle is expected at Commencement.
MR. WOODBURY KANE, '82, has been elected Sporting Editor of the Crimson, vice Mr. F. M. Ware, resigned.
PHOTOGRAPHS of the Senior Crew have been taken, and may be obtained at Pach's studio, at the regular class rates.
PROFESSOR ALEXANDER AGASSIZ has offered the use of his steam yacht for coaching purposes, at New London.
THE strawberry night of the O. K. next Tuesday evening will be held at No. 15 Holworthy, at 7.30 o'clock.
THE University Crew now rows, on account of the examinations, at 1 o'clock and at 4.45 in the afternoon.
MR. WATSON has been coaching the Crew nearly every day this week. He will probably act as coach at New London.
NINE Sophomores took highest second-year Honors in Classics, while only two Seniors and three Juniors have taken the same.
MR. TENETARO MEGATA has presented some very fine books on Japanese Decorative Household Art to the Harvard Library.
NINE young women tried the Harvard examinations in New York City last week, and their papers were unusually good.
DR. PEABODY will preach the Baccalaureate sermon on next Sunday, in Appleton Chapel. Services will begin at 4.15 in the afternoon.
CHUN LUNG, a Chinese member of the Senior Class at Yale, will deliver an Oration at Commencement on the "Chinese in America."
THE Art Club will hold its last meeting for this year next Tuesday evening. A number of prominent gentlemen have been invited to be present.
IT is to be hoped that the band will play something more appropriate than "Johnny Morgan" for the procession of the Alumni Association this year.
The Treasurer of the Freshman Crew has collected $1,119.17, and has paid out $825.43. The balance, $293.74, will be used to cancel debts already contracted.
THE Sophomore Crew wish to express their thanks to the Senior Class for their kind action in presenting them with cups as second prizes. S. Hammond, Jr., Captain.
ONE hundred and twenty-seven Seniors have taken, at some time during their course, Political Economy 2. Only six other electives have been taken by over one hundred.
THE next ball-game with Yale will be played on June 23, at New Haven. If thirty-five names can be obtained a special car will be put on the train. A book for this purpose is now open at Bartlett's.
THE Executive Committee of the Harvard Bicycle Club have accepted General Landor's invitation for the Club to go to Lynn on June 17, to see an Athletic tournament. As large a meet as possible is requested. The time of the meet will be posted later on the bulletin boards.
THE second eight are: Hammond, '81 (bow); Morgan, '80 (2); Trimble, '79 (3); Hemenway, '81 (4); Otis, '81 (5); Bacon, '80 (6); Hooper, '80 (7); Brandigee, '81 (stroke).
THE last rehearsal of the Class Song will be held in Boylston Hall, on Monday, June 16, at 7.15 P. M. The question of a free dinner between Class Day and Commencement will be decided.
PROFESSORS Francis J. Child, William W. Goodwin, and James B. Greenough of Harvard, are expected to take part in the meeting of the American Philological Society at Newport, R. I., beginning July 15.
THE Senior Class will have a free dinner before Commencement if as many as one hundred and twenty members wish it, and if as much as $1600 of the Class Fund shall be paid before Class Day.
THE Nine will play the Uticas to-day in Boston; the Worcesters, Monday, at Worcester; the Amhersts, Wednesday, at Amherst; the Browns (probably), Saturday, on Jarvis.
A SPECIAL examination in Fine Arts 2 and 3, for those students who were absent from the mid-year examinations, will be held in U. E. R. to-morrow, at 10 A. M. No student desiring to make up a condition will be admitted to this examination.
THE expenditures and receipts of the Harvard Dining Association for the month of May were as follows:-
Dr.
Bills paid $11,691.12
Water charge 31.10
Interest on debt 279.35
Interest on advances 211.98
Reduction of debt 166.67
Insurance 18.75
Summer repairs 175.00
Crockery assessment 104.40
Sunday absences 282.00
Stock on hand May 1 1,709.77
---------------
$14,670.14
Cr.
Stock on hand June 1 $1,624.66
Sale of bones 48.17
Sale of swill 36.87
Sale of grease 168.75
Sale of cold food, etc. 81.33
Gas, coal, &c. furnished Theatre 26.06
Extras 1,351.60
Crockery charged to surplus 31.90
Balance 11,300.80
----------------
$14,670.14
Dividing this balance of $11,300.80 by 2729, the number of weeks, gives $4.14; adding head money, .08, gives $4.22, or say $4.25 as the cost of board per week during the month of May, 1879.
STUDENTS desiring information regarding tickets to the West at greatly reduced prices can be accommodated by calling any morning at No. 63 Myrtle Street, or No. 1 Hancock Street, Boston.
THE average age of the Senior class at Yale is 22 years 6 months. It is the oldest class, with the exception of '71 and '78, of which there is any record. As far as can be ascertained the choice for professions is as follows: Lawyers, 49; Business men, 14; Doctors, 13; Literary men, 10; Ministers, 9; Journalists, 5; Devoted to literature, pure and undefiled, 1; Engineer, 1; Opera-singer, 1; Bar-keeper, 1; Tramp, 1.
WE are indebted for the following facts to the investigations of Drs. Bradford and Cutter: Of 113 Harvard students who had rowed in intercollegiate races up to 1870, 10 were killed in the war, and 2 died of diseases contracted in the service. Of the remaining 101, 1 died of Bright's disease, 5 of consumption, 1 of neuralgia, 1 by suicide, 2 by accident, and 1 from an unknown cause. Of the 87 who were living two years ago, 67 reported themselves in good health, and from the rest no definite answer could be obtained.
THE Yale-Harvard boat-race will be rowed on the Thames River, New London, Conn., Friday, June 27, at 4.30 P. M. Should rough water cause a postponement, the race will be attempted about twenty-four hours later. Copies of the BOAT-RACE BULLETIN may be obtained gratuitously as follows: New York, The World office, or Brentano's; Boston, The Advertiser office; New Haven, Gulliver's; New London, the Crocker House; Cambridge, Sever's. Applications by mail will be attended to at the Crocker House only. A second bulletin will be issued June 23, and a third on the morning of the race. Copies of the first bulletin will probably be at Sever's on Monday morning.
Who was it?WHO gave a Puff to '82,
Telling us all that we could do
(Although they thought it early to), -
Who was it?
Who wrote an Editorial,
A sort of huge memorial
Withholding pen censorial, -
Who was it?
Who says fine things, then takes them back,
And gives a pat, and then a crack,
Seeming consistency to lack, -
Who is it?
'82.THE man who borrowed Harper's Magazine for June from the Reading Room has forgotten to return it.
A NEW edition of the "Rules and Regulations," containing quite a number of changes, will probably be published next fall.
AN Instructor in Botany recently asked: "If you plant an Annual what will come up?" Some of the division thought that it would be a semi-annual, but the majority answered, "A condition."
SECOND-YEAR Honors in Classics were awarded as follows: Highest Honors, - Sophomores, W. C. Lane, Jameson, Nelson, J. R. Howe, Ludlow, Howell, Roberts, Scott, Goddard; Juniors, Richardson. Honors, - Sophomores, Edwards, Stanton, W. H. Coolidge, Maude, Rolfe, Jones, O'Callaghan, Brewer, Seaverns, Whitman, Rogers, C. A. Reed, Dickerman, Staples; Juniors, W. G. Taylor, Gilley, March, Rhett; Seniors, Houghton, Bailey, B. F. Harding (Class of '78).
Read more in News
Harvard Bicycle Club.