The knoll on which the house of President Eliot stands has been converted into a kind of toboggan slide by the Cambridge juveniles.
Keyes and Penrose of the University crew have both been compelled to cease rowing for a short time on account of illness.
The collectors for the Tennis Association have already begun their duties, and report that the sentiment of the students is most favorable toward the new plans of the society.
At a meeting of Tufts college last week, it was decided to have a field day, and also to apply for admission to the Inter-collegiate Athletic Association.
The new subscriptions to the Lampoon ought to be handed in as soon as possible, as the paper ought to be put on a firm basis before it loses the services of '85 board.
Only ten days remain before the 1st of March, when the senior photographs must all be taken. Everyone who has not had a sitting should make an appointment at the Studio at once.
It is reported that the photographs taken the other day of Memorial Hall at lunch, are remarkably successful, the facial expressions at the various tables being easily distinguished.
The Board of Overseers have refused to sanction the vote of the Faculty that the Quinquennial catalogue be written in English instead of Latin. Consequently, as hitherto, Anglo Saxon names will continue to be distorted into barbarous Latin.
The Brown nine are planntng a trip among the Southern colleges in the spring, to enable them to obtain practice against college teams before they begin their struggle for the Inter-collegiate championship.
The first twenty-five of the Hasty Pudding Club from the class of '86 is as follows: Adams, W. L. Allen, Ames, W. Baker, Barnes, Borland, Cabot, D. C. Clark, Edgerly, Fessenden, Hearst, Kimball, Minot, Parker, Peabody, Phillips, Rathbone, Sanborn, Sedgwick, R. D. Smith, Vogel, Whitman, Wilson, Winthrop.