Advertisement

FACT AND RUMOR.

Cut in Latin 12 yesterday.

Theses in N. H. 2 will be handed in before April 1.

Marks in Sophomore Rhetoric will be announced a week from Thursday.

The freshman nine is now working three hours a week in the cage.

The Cornell Sun says that Harvard has returned to the use of local time.

Advertisement

The freshman tug-of-war team works in the gymnasium every day at 4 o'clock.

Shingles of the Shooting Club can be had at Holworthy 22, from 9 to 11 A. M., Thursday.

The Law School crew decided yesterday to give up rowing, as there were not enough men.

The Law School tug-of-war team is making arrangements to pull the Union Gymnasium team.

The board at Memorial for the months of December and January will be charged $3.89.

The senior crew commenced "solid" work in the gymnasium yesterday with the old men on.

Marks were given out yesterday in N. H. 2, Political Economy 2, Roman Law 1. History 9 and 15.

Harvard has had but one Chief Justice of the United States, William Cushing.

The Cornell Alumni resident in Chicago are to have a reunion and banquet in March.

The senate committee on appropriations has recommended that $306,000 be appropriated for West Point.

Mails at the Post Office, Harvard square, close at 6.25-8.30-10.20-10.45 11.30 A. M. and 2.30-4.45-7.00-8.00 P. M.

Mr. Mac Vane announced yesterday that for the next few weeks the Saturday lectures in History 12 would be omitted.

The Cincinnati University accepts a conditional bequest of property bringing $15,000 per annum, from the estate of Joseph Longworth.

O. G. Browne, a graduate of Harvard, has recently been promoted to an important position upon the editorial staff of the N. Y. Herald.

Candidates for the '85 tug-of-war will please call at 25 C. H. this evening, and be at the gymnasium promptly at four tomorrow. S. L. Foster, for the captain.

The tenth theme in English 5 will be due a week from next Friday. Subject: The restrictions on athletics by the faculty, and the advisability of the minimum requisition in Greek.

Professor Crosswell has had a pamphlet printed for members of Greek 1, giving information about the work to be done in that course during the coming half-year.

The Philadelphia Alumni Association of Yale College tendered an informal reception in the parlors of the University Club in that city last Friday evening, to Prof. W. G. Sumner, of Yale.

The Heliotype Co. must know at once if the class are to have the albums. All of the '84 men who wish one please step into Leavitt and Peirce's and sign their names. We must have one hundred signatures before next Wednesday.

H. W. TUPPER, for Pach Bros.There are now forty-eight lady students in the Harvard Annex, and it is the testimony of some of the Harvard professors that the average scholarship of the classes in the Annex is above that of the classes in the college. Over fifty courses are open to the pupils, and of these, Greek, Latin, English, German and mathematics attract the largest numbers. This year, thirty-five out of the forty-eight ladies have chosen Greek electives. Two enthusiastic girls from Texas sold lands and traveled two thousand miles for privileges which Harvard University could afford beyond any woman's college. In return, the Annex has sent a graduate to Montana as head of a classical school. [Gazette.

Advertisement