The second Senior Forensic is due Dec. 1.
Quite a number of men went home to vote yesterday.
There is too much tardiness at prayers among the freshmen.
F. A. Fenrold, '82, is teaching French and German at Everett, Mass.
A few men still continue to use the singles and working boats at the boat house.
The freshmen will have an examination in Latin next Wednesday at 2 P.M.
Harvard vs. Dartmouth, Holmes field, Thursday, Nov. 9 at 4 o'clock. Admission 25 cents.
W. R. Trask, '85, and R. H. Delafield, S. S., will be the hares in the run of the hare and hounds on Friday.
Seniors are reminded that they can obtain their rank and average for the past three years by applying at the office.
In another column is published the programme of the first concert of the Boston Symphony Orchestra in Sanders Theatre tomorrow evening at 7.45.
The tennis match between Mr. J. S. Clark, '83, and Mr. R. D. Sears, '83, for the college championship, will be played on the Longwood Cricket Club's grounds today if the weather permits.
The Harvard, Yale and Princeton University elevens are all stronger teams than those of '81, and the contest for the pennant this month promises to lead to a very exciting series of games. - [N. Y. World.
The Index will be out about Dec. 1. It will contain in addition to the matter given last year measurements of the crew, averages of all the players in the Inter-Collegiate Base-Ball League, and generally more extensive athletic records.
The annual catalogue of the Harvard Club of Chicago is out. The club is in a flourishing condition, with 102 members. The officers are Walter C. Larned, '71, president; Henry S. Boutwell, '76, secretary, and Francis Almy, '79, treasurer.
The University Foot-Ball Eleven leave for New York on Friday, Nov. 10th, by the one o'clock train. They play Columbia, at Hoboken, Saturday, Nov. 11th, at two o'clock. It is hoped that a large number of men will be present to encourage the team in their first game for the college championship.
Capt. Storrow of the sophomore crew is coaching his new men in the following order : Bow, Homans; 2, Seavey; 3, B. B. Thayer; 4, Sutton; 5, J. E. Thayer; 6, Batten; 7, Bowen; stroke, E. D. Marsh. They row at 3.30 every afternoon, and do the chest-weights and take a run out of doors afterward.
The News says of Yale's game with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Saturday : "The 'Techs' proved to be, on the whole, rather large men, but no such formidable antagonists as the score in their game with Harvard had led us to expect. The result of the game is particularly gratifying, as showing - as far as such indirect comparisons can show - that our team is stronger than Harvard's."
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