The marks in N. H. 2 are out.
G. F. Davidson, '85, is studying law in San Francisco.
Forty-four men are training for the Princeton Lacrosse Team.
Yale formerly boasted a "missionary society," supported by undergraduates.
The candidates for the Oxford and Cambridge crews train only six weeks.
Dr. Charles Waldstein is soon to deliver a short course of lectures at Cornell.
There are eight pitchers in training for the University of Pennsylvania nine.
One hundred and fifty-eight of the present freshman class are from Massachusetts.
President McCosh of Princeton is soon to address an anti-secret society convention in Chicago.
Yale is said to have more graduates engaged in journalism than any university or college in this country. - Yale News.
The Freshman Glee and Banjo clubs are practicing regularly; they will probably give their concert some time in May.
Slade, '90, who has been training with the 'Varsity, is now a candidate for the outfield on the freshman nine.
Mr. Cowles, president of the Yale News, was among the guests at the CRIMSON banquet Tuesday night. He leaves Cambridge to-morrow.
Mr. Russell Sturgis, Jr., will address the Harvard Young Men's Christian Association this evening at 6.30. All students are cordially invited.
Neither the faculty nor the overseers have to do with the disbursements of the college funds; this business is entirely in the hands of the corporation.
Examination of the complaint box in the Harvard CRIMSON office shows but three against the new marking system to twenty or thirty a year ago. - Princetonian.
There is soon to be a mass meeting of the freshman class to reconsider the action taken in regard to admitting Yale to the Columbia-Harvard race next June.
During President Davies' administration in Princeton is was customary to appoint one of the students to read a portion of the scriptures at morning prayers. - Princetonian.
A large audience welcomed James Russell Lowell last Tuesday evening at the Lowell Institute when he delivered his first lecture on "Old English Dramatists." The next lecture occurs to-morrow evening.
A biological library is to be erected at Princeton by the class of '77. It is to have a club-room for the use of the members of that class, and will be completed next year in time for '77 to hold its decennial dinner there.
Hight, '89, has been obliged to leave college on account of illness arising from overtraining on his class tug-of-war team and crew. Of course he will be now unable to pull on the tug-of-war, and there is even some fear that he will not be able to row on the crew.
The membership of the new Athletic Club of Boston is to be limited to 1000. The membership fee is to be $40 and the annual assessment, $30. It is estimated that the cost of the building will be $225,000. The site chosen is on Dartmouth street, near the Boston & Albany station.
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St. Paul's Society.