There will be a Glee Club rehearsal at 4.45 to-day.
An American college has been established in Shanghai, China.
Rhinelander, '87 has been elected a member of the St. Paul Guild.
R. D. Sears has a younger brother who is a very promising tennis player.
The sum of $16,000 was recently paid in London for a Magazine Bible.
The second nine will shortly be chosen from the candidates to the 'Varsity nine.
It is said that the men in History 13 complain greatly of oppressive air in the recitation room.
The candidates for the Mott Haven team are now practising, pitching the 16 pound shot from hand to hand.
The annual boat race between Oxford and Cambridge will take place this year on March 28th.
There are already over 250 subscribers to the Co-operative society at Yale, and the society will soon be established.
The Hon. William Henry Rawle of Philadelphia is to deliver the annual Phi Beta Kappa oration at Harvard, next June.
During the past year, Dartmouth has erected a Library, and a Chapel at a cost of $90,000. The library will hold 165,000 volumes.
The second number of the present volume of the Advocate will be ready at Sever's to-day, at 4 P.M. The paper will be delivered promptly to all subscribers whose names are on the list before that time, Subscribe at Sever's.
Dartmouth is agitating the question of having a Co-operative Society, and there is no doubt but that it will soon be established.
The last number of the Lampoon is one of the best that has been published, some of the drawings reminding one of Life in style and execution.
It will be somewhat interesting to compare the rules that the colleges of Princeton and Yale will play foot ball under, in the coming season.
The Harvard School of Divinity has seven professors, but only eleven students.-[Ex. This is a mistake, as it has some 26 students altogether.
Speaking of the CRIMSON, the editor of Student Life, with a pleasing originality of rhetoric, remarks-"A college paper has no business being a daily."
Any Amherst student who has spent two hours in preparing a lesson, but has failed to learn it in that time, can, by reporting the fact, be excused from reciting.-[Ex.
The sections in Greek 5 having finished the Pax of Aristophanes, will immediately begin to read the Trachiniae of Sophocles. Text books should be procured at once.
The recent sale of the Duke of Wellington's Library is declared to be the greatest book sale on record. It continued for over a month, and the total receipts were some $850,000.
In imitation of the custom, almost universal in France, of celebrating the birthday of Victor Hugo, a lecture was given in Sever, yesterday, commemorative of the great author, to which the students of the advanced French courses were invited. The lecturer, Mr. Cohn, will finish his remarks on Saturday, at 9.
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