The Junior Thesis is due to-day.
The first spring athletic meeting will take place three weeks from Saturday.
Wesleyan has been admitted into the New Intercollegiate Association.
Bowdoin plays Harvard this afternoon on Holmes Field, at 4 o'clock.
The Yale freshmen play the Amherst freshmen at New Haven next Saturday.
The actors in the Hasty Pudding Theatricals were photographed by Pach yesterday.
To-morrow is the last day of receiving the names of competitors for the Boylston Prizes.
The business in the gentlemen's furnishing department of the Co operative store is daily increasing.
It is rumored that Col. Theodore Lyman has refused to be a candidate for the office of Overseer of Harvard University.
The New England Association of the Alumni of Phillips Exeter academy will hold its second annual banquet to-morrow evening at the Vendome Hotel.
It is said that the Rev. Brewster DeCamp, the president of St. Joseph's College Middlebush, Cal., was expelled from four different colleges before he succeeded in getting a degree from any instructor.
The late Bishop Alfred Lee was born in 1807 in the historic Cambridge mansion immortalized by Longfellow in "The old House by the Lindens" and graduated at Harvard in 1827.
A very pleasant German was given by the present members of the Pi Eta Society last Friday evening, in Roberts Hall. It is understood that the affair was a great success.
At the annual meeting of the CRIMSON the following officers were elected: President, Wm. Barnes, Jr.; Managing Editor, James Gore King; Secretary, Irving A. Rutland.
A German complains that a poor man's son cannot go to college at Yale because it costs so much. He wrote to the members of the graduating class at Yale, and from the 109 answers received he found that the average cost for the four years was $960. - N. Y. Sun.
It has become so fashionable at Yale for single scullers and other venturesome oarsmen to upset in the harbor, that a light skiff is kept in readiness at the boat house to rescue all those who think enthusiasm the only thing needed to make a man an accomplished oarsman.
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WELD CREWS.