There will be a cut in English V tomorrow.
The "Practical Investigation" in Philosophy XI is due next week.
Prof. Bocher will give a reading in Sever 11 this evening, at 7.30 p.m.
The whole number of men in the Law School this year is 151, over 153 last year.
Mr. J. Alexander Hamilton, late of Yale college, has been elected a member of the Thayer Law Club.
Bass of the Exeter team was ruled off of the field Saturday for striking Morgan of the freshman team.
The cups for the class foot-ball championship are now on exhibition at Leavitt & Peirce's.
Harvard men who saw the Yale eleven play Saturday rated it as the worst they had seen for years.
Larkin, '87, retains the college championship in tennis at Princeton, defeating Hodge, '88, 6-3, 6-2, 6-4, on Wednesday last.
Columbia has already put a tug-of-war team in training for the Mott Haven sports; Mr. R. L. Stevens is the captain.
Prof. Bowen has written a work entitled, "A Layman's Study of the English Bible." It has just been issued from the press of Scribner.
A number of upper classmen living in the neighboring states, go home tomorrow to vote. All absences from recitation will be excused to these men. - Yale News.
Cornell will send a team to the inter-collegiate sports this year, and will try to arrange base-ball games with Yale, Harvard and Princeton.
The Tech and Williams elevens play on Saturday at the Union grounds. This will be the most exciting game of the northern series.
At an exhibition at the meting of the Photographic Society last evening, the first prize for landscapes was taken by storrow, '87, and the second prize by G. Hubbard, '87.
There was a meeting of the N. H. Society last evening in Mass. 2. Papers were read by L. M. Garrison and R. P. Bigelow. The society's collections are increasing rapidly.
The present freshman class has apparently failed to surpass others in point of numbers after all; the bulletin just posted makes the number of freshmen 259, instead of 268 as previously reported, '86 had 263.
Sunday night in front of the Chapel one Cambridge lady was overheard remarking to another, in an injured and indignant tone, "I don't think any of these seats should be reserved for students."
The Dante Society has offered an annual prize of one hundred dollars to be awarded for the writer of the best essay on a subject on the life or works of Dante. The limitations and conditions of the offer will be found in the college catalogue.
Read more in News
Notice.