Morning prayers in the Chapel begin this morning.
Seventy two men took the fall examinations for admission.
Clark, who has caught for the Brown nine for three years, has gone to Williams.
Professor J. W. White's new house on Concord Avenue has been completed.
Mr. O. R. Hansen, '85 has returned to Cambridge and will enter the Law School.
The annual Exeter-Andover foot-ball match will take place at Andover on the 13th of November.
More applications for physical examinations have been made this year than ever before.
Peters of Yale has entered the Yale Law School, but it is reported that he will not play foot-ball this year.
Sedgwick, '86 has just left for the West where he has a position in one of the great western railroad companies.
The Yale News is making great efforts to have the Inter-collegiate Tennis tournament held in New Haven this fall.
The freshman class of Wellesley this year numbers 163. It would appear from this as if higher education for women was an assured success.
Our friend, known among us as "And the Record is a cent," has bought a new dress and now issues a twelve-page Sunday edition, price five cents.
The present freshman class at Yale is the largest that has ever entered that institution; numbering 277. The cities sending the most representatives are: New Haven, 38; New York, 23; Chicago, 19; Cleveland and Cincinnatti, 7 each; St. Louis and Philadelphia, 6 each.
The first annual meeting of the CRIMSON board will be held to day in the Sanctum, at 1.30 p.m. Every editor is required to be present.
The Northern Inter-collegiate Foot-Ball League this year will include Williams, Amherst, Tufts and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The season will open Oct. 20, and six games will be played by each college.
Coxe, Yale '87, and Sherman, Yale '89, have entered for several events in the fall games of the New York athletic club to be held in Mott Haven.
The Pennsylvanian complains of a lack of enthusiasm on the part of '90, as they failed to present a foot-ball eleven to play a scheduled game with '89.
The freshman class is requested to assemble in Sever A, at 9 o'clock, Tuesday, Oct. 5, to meet Mr. Briggs, who will conduct the teaching to be given in English A.
At the request of several students who are interested in History 10, that course will be given this year instead of being kept until next as announced in the catalogue.
Bull, Yale '88, S., who was hurt playing foot-ball in practice, is more seriously injured than at first supposed. There is a strong possibility of his not being able to play this year.
All subscribers to the Advocate who have not received the first number can have the same by applying at Sever's. Subscriptions received at Sever's and Amee's.
And yet Harvard had the three heaviest batsmen in the league in Phillips, Henshaw and Willard. Smith led all the pitchers, and Allen all the catchers, Foster virtuously led all the fielders, and yet -
The schedule of games so far arranged by the Yale eleven are as follows: October 6, Wesleyan in New Haven; October 9, Wesleyan in Hartford; October 16, Mass. Institute Technology in New Haven; October 23, Crescents in New Haven; November 2, Crescents in Brooklyn. The intervening Wednesdays are to be filled in with games so that two games a week shall be played. It seems as if Yale were doing everything in her power to have the foot-ball championship this year.
The following is from the Pennsylvanian: "Harvard college will celebrate its two hundred and fiftieth anniversary next November. It is not the oldest American University, as that of Mexico is fifty years older.
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