A dramatic club has been formed at Exeter.
There are 30 candidates for the Dartmouth nine.
The average price of room rent at Princeton is $60.
The class of '76 of Williams has given a new organ to the college chapel.
Thirty-eight men have applied for membership in the Yale Dramatic Club.
S. Sloan, Jr., '87, has been elected president of the Columbia College Boat Club.
The annual dinner of the class of '86, Boston Latin school, will take place at Young's next Thursday evening.
The director's office in the gymnasium has recently been fitted up with two handsome black walnut desks.
The choir will be assisted at the vesper service this afternoon by the wellknown oratorio tenor, Mr. George J. Parker.
The students of the Law School of the University of Pennsylvania are trying to form an eight-oared crew.
The Tufts Foot-ball Association are in debt $100; each member of the college will be assessed a fixed amount.
The Princeton Glee Club, assisted by the Banjo Club, gave a concert in Philadelphia last week, which was a decided success.
The average attendance at the Princeton gymnasium between the hours of five and six is seventy-five.
The Amherst Freshman nine have challenged the Yale Freshman to play in April; the challenge has been accepted.
The toboggan slide at Williams has been lengthened and improved. It is owned and controlled by a stock company of students.
There are at present thirty graduates of Yale, twenty-eight of Princeton, and twelve of Harvard, studying at the Columbia Law school.
Wesleyan's new catalogue has just appeared; it contains the names of one hundred and ninety-four students, sixty of whom are freshmen.
The New York State Inter-Collegiate Athletic Association held a meeting in Syracuse on Friday. Delegates were present from Columbia, Cornell, Union, Syracuse, Hamilton, and Hobart Colleges. The annual field day will be held in Syracuse, May 25. - Yale News.
The Cambridge Railroad tie-up had its interesting features yesterday. A large crowd assembled on the square last night and knocked a driver senseless who brought through a car. Herdics and barges alone could be used yesterday. No cars for a week, they say.
The faculty of the University of Pennsylvania is at present making an effort to increase the importance and interest of Commencement week. The students have no class day at all, and very little occurs on commencement day except the awarding of degrees.
Citizens of Cambridge, lend us your ears! - "A Cambridge correspondent of the Critic actually insinuates that the atmosphere of art in the classic surburb is about as bleak as a Dekota blizzard. The studios are few and the visitors fewer, and the pictures in the magazines, we are told, are about all the Cantabs have to talk about. As for music, this correspondent says the real appreciative lover of music doesn't abound there, and the occasional Symphony concerts in Sanders Theatre are attended only for form's sake. It's lucky for this correspondent that hazing has gone by in Cambridge; otherwise Pericles and Aspasia would take him out and hold him under a pump nozzle." - Boston Herald.
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