Princeton is to found a club in Kentucky.
Coolidge, '81, L. S., has returned to college.
Gilman is at present anchoring the '85 tug-of-war team.
The Amateur Athlete has been revived.
The Princeton cricketers have begun out-of-door practice.
The winter at Yale is enlivened by occasional minstrel shows.
The Inter-collegiate Baseball Convention meets today in Springfield.
The marks in Sophomore Rhetoric will be returned in a few days.
There was a meeting of the executive committee of the nine yesterday.
Mr. Conant, '84, has been elected a member of the Historical Society.
Lehigh has applied for admittance into the Inter-collegiate Tennis Association.
The Yale freshmen have four candidates for the 'varsity nine. '87 brace up!
A countryman seeing the Yale crew running on the street, asked if it were Buffalo Bill's troupe.
Foster, '85, has injured his knee so seriously as to prevent his pulling in the tug-of-war contest.
There are six Harvard men on the Boston Globe. M. H. Cushing, '83, is night editor.
The life of Daniel Webster, in the Statesmen series, written by Henry Cabot Lodge, has reached a third edition.
The gymnasium at Cornell is lighted by electricity, and consequently the most popular time for exercising is during the evening.
Complaint is made because the marks have not yet been returned in a course in Italian which contains only nine men.
Mr. Dewey, '86, will be unable to return to Cambridge in time to anchor the sophomore four at the winter games.
The Princeton nine expect to visit Philadelphia and Baltimore during the spring vacation, and intend to play two games at each place. [Princetonian.
The section in Latin 12 will finish Quintillion at the next recitation, and then will take up Gellius. The edition of Hertz in the Tenbner series is recommended.
The freshman who translated de mortuis nil nisi bonum: "From the dead nothing but bones," has a brilliant career awaiting him in the medical profession.
The account of the recent trouble between the Cornell freshmen and sophomores is said to have been purely fictions. The sophomore class has called an indignation meeting to protest.
The Memorial Hall waiters will shortly give a concert and ball for the benefit of one of their members who is sick. The affair will come off at Pythian Hall, Cambridgeport, on Thursday evening, March 20, 1884, at 8 o'clock. Tickets 35 cents.
The faculty of Williams College have been obliged to hire a policeman to patrol the college ground to prevent a collision between the sophomores and freshmen. For the past three days can rushing has been indulged in with considerable fierceness.
Rose Hill College, of Fordham, New York, which usually has an excellent nine and played us last spring a more sharply-contested game than Brown will probably have representatives at the base-ball convention who will try and gain her admission. [News.
The following is a partial list of the entries for the first H. A. A. meeting:
Heavy-weight wrestling.-M. G. Haughton, S. S.; Middle-weight, O. Bangs, S. S.; light-weight, O. Bangs, S. S.; feather-weight, A. C. Coolidge, '87, Simes, '85. Middleweight sparring, J. J. Colony. Parallel bars, T. C. Bachelder, L. S. General excellence T. C. Bachelder.
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