The Shooting Club will begin its matches next week.
The first year in the Law School has begun pleading.
The bow oar of the Oxford crew weighs only 150 pounds.
Latin 5 has begun the third book of Cicero's "De Finibus."
Harvard Square was the scene of a lively runaway, yesterday afternoon.
There will be a meeting of the Junior class to-morrow evening.
The seventh theme in English 12, a narrative, will be due on Wednesday, Feb. 18.
A double quartette of the Glee Club will give a concert at Plymouth on Friday evening.
Oberlin has a number of Hawiians, Japanese, and Zulus enrolled in its catalogue.
Mr. Ferris, instructor in boxing, has been to Williams to give instruction to the students there.
There will be a special meeting of the faculty this afternoon to discuss the prayer petition.
Mr. E. B. Stewart, '87, has on exhibition at the Boston Art Club, two paintings.
It is said that Harris and Hamlin will, during the present week, begin to row with the junior crew.
The average of the Oxford University crew is 174 1-4 pounds, of the Cambridge crew, 171 3-4 pounds.
As is shown by the article on the "Vet." School which we print to-day, this department of the University is rapidly being brought into a state of complete equipment.
"Couldn't Princeton join with us in forming a small rowing association on our own hook?" asks the Williams Athenaeum.
Subscriptions for the CRIMSON may be left at the Co-operative rooms, and not at Amee's as was announced yesterday.
Students may have their dogs treated at the Harvard Veterinary School for 50 cents per day. This charge includes both care and treatment.
No recitations were held in Greek 5 and 10, yesterday, as the alterations in Prof. White's recitation rooms are not quite completed.
"Thon," the proposed new pronoun (impersonal, singular number), is being taught by some of the teachers in the public schools at Lewiston, Me.
The alterations made during the midyears in Professor White's recitation room have greatly increased the facilities of the Greek department.
The third volume of Schouler's "History of the United States," used in History 13, will be published next May. It will cover the period 1817-1831.
The report comes from the Law School that the Beck-Holworthy club has been discussing whether a clock which strikes the hour can be arrested for assault and battery.
Mr. R. P. Perkins, captain of the University crew of last year, coached the university crew on Saturday afternoon. The crew rowed 1000 strokes.
Baron George von Bunsen, with whom the college made so pleasant an acquaintance two years ago, delivered the commemorative address on Frederick Knapp last month in Berlin.
Many Harvard men were among the audience at the Bijou, last evening. The improvement in the rendering of the "Sorcerer" is such that it far surpasses last year's performance of the opera. The piece bids fair to have a prosperous run.
The Yale Courant, describing the Peabody Museum, gives utterance to the following bon mot. "In a large room on the first floor, lectures on scientific subjects are frequently given, one on the evolution of a Princeton man from a lump of New Jersey mud being especially popular."
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