Columbia's '85 crew capsized last week.
Harvard vs. Brown at Providence tomorrow.
The freshman examinations begin next Monday.
Storrow, '85, is now rowing on the University crew.
The Law School library will here-after close at 7 P. M.
The Law School examinations are four hours in length.
Columbia men are backing their crew to an unusual extent.
The Yale class races will hereafter be rowed in the New Haven harbor.
Gilman, '85, and Hutchinson, '84, are the substitutes of the University crew.
The examination books in Freshman Chemistry will be examined by Mr. Huntington.
The freshman nine have won every game in which Chamberlain and Kimball formed the battery.
Prof. J. M. Peirce dictated a syllabus to the section in Maximum Analytics yesterday afternoon.
The prize bat this year will be given for the best average in all the college games played, both exhibition and championship.
Mr. Hart, the newly appointed instructor, will take a course in American constitutional history next year. Mr. Hart was ivy orator of the class of '80.
In the annual field day sports of the Syracuse University, Friday, M. Harvin, '85, beat the record in the high kick. He scored eight feet six inches. His height is six feet two inches.
Mild sarcasm of the Courant regarding Harvard: "Not to carry a silver-headed cane to breakfast is considered in 'bad form,' and the man who does not own a real bull-pup is an outcast." We are crushed.
The Yale Courant says that the gate receipts at the recent lacrosse game with Harvard amounted to just eight dollars; advertising and kindred expenses to twenty. It claims that there is no room for a new sport.
The Columbia freshman crew, which will row at New London, is composed as follows: Bow, B. Morningstar; 2, F. W. Paris; 3, E. De Witt; 4, E. J. Lederle; 5, E. C. Beckwith; 6, J. Lawrence; 7, E. B. Hart, Jr.; stroke, N. J. Doyle; cox., W. B. Chamberlain.
No other utterance at the Unitarian festival on Thursday evening elicited such enthusiastic demonstrations of approval as when the Rev. Mr. Peabody referred approvingly to the refusal of Harvard University to grant its highest honor to Governor Butler. A tremendous burst of applause greeted the announcement and was thrice repeated.
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Make-up Mid-Year Examinations.