The Advocate is now printed in Boston.
Kendall, '84, is trying for the junior crew.
There was no recitation in Latin 8 yesterday.
Both candidates for speaker at Albany are Harvard graduates.
The second Curtis Hall assembly (Jamaica Plain) occurs tonight.
The Union Athletic Club games are announced for the latter part of January.
An exchange speaks of a number of ladies "rising as one man" and leaving the room.
Dr. Laughlin is conducting the course in Political Economy 1 during Mr. Taussig's absence.
The Harvard chapter was represented at the convention of the Zeta Psi Fraternity in Boston yesterday.
C. D. Willard ('83, University of Michigan), editor of the Michigan Argonaut, visited Harvard yesterday.
It is estimated that fully two-thirds of the students of Harvard take exercise in some form or other at the gymnasium.
As there was no quorum present at the Memorial directors' meeting last evening, another meeting will be held Monday evening at 6.15.
It is stated that the New York Club has secured "a prominent college catcher" from central New York to play on their nine the coming spring.
The Nation of this week has a review of "Our Liberal Movement in Theology," by Joseph Henry Allen, lecturer on ecclesiastical history in Harvard University.
Why Lampy chose blue as the color of his Christmas chromo is a mystery; perhaps it reflects his state of mind, perhaps it is a delicate compliment to Yale. [Tech.
The universities of Norway are now open to women, and any Norwegian girl may strive for the highest degrees that her country has to offer as a reward for scholarship. Harvard and Yale will eventually fall into the line of progress. [Ex.
Ex-President Hopkins said in New York city last month that Williams was the first college to form an association of alumni, and to give the alumni a part in the college government.
The class rushes at the Yale Sheffield School are not noted for their tameness. One fellow, some time ago, was completely stripped of his clothing and forced to scramble to his room with a long ulster wrapped around him.
The Harvard Club of Chicago will give a dinner during the present month, to which President Eliot, several Harvard professors and prominent graduates, together with the Glee Club, have been invited. It is understood that President Eliot will be present and has expressed his willingness that the Glee Club should also attend.
The librarian of Harvard University, in acknowledging the receipt of a copy of Bent's "Short Sayings of Great Men," says, "I am glad to have at my elbow in my own study - as I have had for some days - in a convenient nook in my official den, another good friend of a book, to make me seem to others wiser than I am, and to show me to myself more deficient than ever." - [Ex.
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