Lampoon out today.
Marks in Spanish 1 are out.
No recitations in Fine Arts 3 this week.
The marks in German 1 will be announced Tuesday.
The three upper classes at Yale gave Germans Thursday evening.
History and Methods of Classical Study by Prof. Allen, in sever 14, at 11 A. M., today.
If the weather is unfavorable, the meet of the Shooting Club at Watertown today will be postponed.
Notice of next Monday's meeting have been sent to the members of the Co-operative Society.
Mr. George Washington Childs, of Philadelphia, has in his possession as a relic, the college gown worn by the poet, Tom Moore, at the University of Dublin.
The society of Christian Brethren are considering the feasibility of a thorough canvass of the college, to determine its religious and denominational status.
The "Museums of the United States," including the Agassiz Museum at Harvard are described in the current Science by Prof. Tittel of the University of Munich.
"Quotations in the New Testament, by C. H. Troy, D. D., professor of Hebrew in Harvard University," is among the latest announcements of C. Scribner's Sons, N. Y.
A lecture before the Harvard Historical Society will be given on each successive Tuesday evening, in sever 11. On February 26, Gen. Palfrey will lecture on "Gaine's Mill and the Peninsular Campaign."
Membership tickets in the Co-operative Society for the next half year are tastefully printed in crimson ink, in a smaller size than last year's tickets.
The University of Oxford has lately published an "Honors' Registry," containing a complete record of the distinctions won by students at Oxford up to the present date.
The vote for Memorial Hall directors last evening was as follows: J. H. Huddleston, 65; J. M. Thompson, 24; M. W. Richardson, 10; scattering, 2. Mr. Huddleston is therefore elected a director from '86.
The Co-operative rooms will be open till 9.30 o'clock this morning to enable members to get their book proceeds, if any are due, and to get away any ordered goods that may be ready for them.
Persons desiring to join the Co-operative Society can send in their names and receive blank agreements to sign and return, thus saving the trouble of personally putting down their names on the membership books at the office of the society.
Prof. Hill will meet any senior entitled to a commencement part who has not yet handed in the subject on which he wishes to write, or who desires to change the subject he has handed in, between the hours of 2.30 and 3.30 P. M. Tuesday, February 19, in Sever 1.
The list of the colleges concerned in the matter of the new athletic regulations is as follows: Williams, Amherst, Dartmouth, Tufts, Harvard, Columbia, Trinity, Hobart, Lafayette, Rutgers, Union, Bowdoin, Princeton, College of the City of New York, Stevens Institute, Wesleyan University, Brown, Cornell, Lehigh, Johns Hopkins, University of Vermont, and the University of Pennsylvania. It is not likely that the Yale faculty will vote on the resolutions at all.
The captain of the Princeton nine, says the N. Y. Tribune, has openly declared that under such restrictions as those recently proposed in the N. Y. conference he will not attempt the management of the team, and other old players have avowed their intention of giving up the sport. One of them was heard to say that if the champion Yale was excluded, the contests would be reduced to walk over, and all interest and enthusiasm would be at an end. This is the general verdict at Princeton.
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