A new university has been located at Chattanooga, Tenn. It will be the central Methodist University in the South, and $80,000 will be spent on it this year.
As the floats at the boat-house are not yet in place, the crews already on the river will have to resort to the old process of launching, known commonly as "wading."
Mr. Claflin, '86, is one of the committee appointed by the League of American Wheelmen to take action as to the advisability of establishing an organ for that body.
The meeting of the Inter-collegiate Baseball Association meets in New York today. Our delegates are, Messrs. T. J. Coolidge and LeMoyne, '84, and Crocker, '85.
Charles Dudley Warner, of the class of 1871, in Hamilton College, has been invited to deliver the oration before the alumni of that institution at the next commencement.
Final arrangements are being made by the Yale Bicycle Club concerning the hiring of Hamilton Park, and if the terms they offer are not satisfactory, the project of the races will be given up.
The proportion of Harvard students and professors among the audience at the performances of Irving and Helen Terry has been very large. This goes to prove that educated men appreciate good acting and patronize it.
Still more chest weights are being placed in the gymnasium. At the rate of progress made this winter in squeezing needed apparatus in every available corner, there will soon be scarcely a foot of wall or floor uncovered.
Winfred A. Stearns, acting curator of the Agricultural Museum at Amherst, Mass., propose to start a monthly scientific journal at Amherst, to be devoted exclusively to the interests of Massachusetts natural history, and called the Bulletin of the Natural History of the State of Massachusetts, with the approval of the faculty and under the auspices of the college.