Surveying 2 visited the Meigs elevated railway yesterday, and made elaborate drawings of it. The road is fast approaching completion.
Twenty-two juniors are trying for their class crew.
The reading-room is open every evening from 6.30 to 8.30.
The first senior party in Armory Hall occurs this evening.
The proposed removal of Union College to Albany, is without foundation.
The first moot court trial at the Law School comes this afternoon in Austin Hall.
Professor Palmer's lectures in Philosophy 4 will soon be published in book form.
The Photographic Club will have a new shingle, which is reported to be very handsome.
Lawrence Hall, the new Yale dormitory, will not be ready for occupation till next year.
Several panes of glass were blown out of the gymnasium yesterday by the wind.
The Tuftonian complains that their reading-room has been continually pilfered by some of its members.
The next meeting of the Union, on Friday, the 18th, will be Russian Nihilism. It will be presented by A. B. Houghton, '86, and E. J. Rich, '87, in the affirmative, and W. C. Boyden, '86, and J. M. Merriam, '86, in the negative.
Some of the temperance men among the students assisted at the polls yesterday in distributing non-license tickets.
The clock in front of Holyoke House has become permanently disabled, to the great inconvenience of men who are in the habit of consulting it.
President Eliot, it is said, voted for license at the Municipal election yesterday.
The Tuftonian publishes a very poor adaptation of the "Wanderings of Audacious," which appeared in the Lampoon last year.
"Cutting" is a deadly offense in the eyes of the faculty of Amherst College. Lately they decided that only "cuts on account of deaths in the family" are excusable. - Cornell Sun.
The lacrosse twelve will not begin regular gymnasium exercise on the chest-weights, dumbbells and running until after the semi annual examinations. Cage work will begin earlier, as soon as the cage is put in better order.
The teeth of pupils in Chicago public schools, under a resolution adopted by the Board of Education of that city, are to be examined by the Chicago Dental Society "in the interests of science." The examination is to be made without cost to the children and without interfering with their studies.
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