Laboratory work in N. H. 3 will begin on Tuesday next.
J. S. Stevens, '88, has gone to Colorado for his health.
Yale has 69 base balls won from various clubs, collegiate and amateur.
An exchange declares that foot-ball flourishes at the Ontario Ladies College.
Prof. Torrey is now able to go about, and will soon resume his lectures as usual.
Dr. Taussig delivered the lecture in History 13 yesterday, in Dr. Hart's absence.
The Princeton Review, after an existence of sixty years, has ceased to be published.
The Yale crews expect to get on the water in a few days, provided the weather remains mild.
The '85 and '86 crews are exercising with dumb bells, instead of chestweights for a change.
Pain L. S. Fogg, '85, and Frothingham, '86, are going to enter the Technology sports next Saturday.
The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity has revived its chapter at Cornell, after an interval of nine years.
Prof. Hardy, of Mathematics, of Dartmouth College, has refused the presidency of Bowdoin, proffered to him.
The expenses of the Yale boat club during the past year were $7,000; over $1,000 remains to be raised to meet the deficit.
The chess game between Yale and Princeton is progressing very slowly. It is nearly three weeks since Princeton has been heard from.
The Bowdoin Orient publishes tributes to the memory of the poet Longfellow, written by Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Dr. C. A. Bartol.
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English VI.