Peabody, '87, and Craig, '87, are at the Yale Theological School.
The laboratory sections in N. H. 2 begin work tomorrow.
Yale authorities are talking seriously of building a new gymnasium.
The trustees of Brown University have voted not to adopt co-education.
Seventeen men of other colleges have entered the upper classes at Amherst.
Hildreth, '85, who has been abroad for three years on a fellowship, has returned to Cambridge.
The University of Michigan has an elective course in the art of writing plays for the stage.
Farquhar, fullback on last year's Exeter eleven, will be unable to play this year on account of illness.
In the bicycle races at Lynn on Saturday, R. H. Davis. '91, won the three mile amateur race in 9 minutes, 4 1-2 seconds.
The Indiana Supreme Court has decided that college students of a legal age may vote in college towns.
The class of '89, Princeton, has a rowing club which is said to be in a flourishing condition.
There are 100 more students in the freshman class of Harvard than in the collegiate freshman class of Yale.
Four hundred and forty students are registered at Johns Hopkins against 240 last year.
W. F. Greenman, '85, a graduate of the Divinity School, has accepted a call from the Unitarian church of Winona, Minnesota.
During the summer, a bowling alley and a swimming bath were added to the gymnasium of Lasell Seminary at Auburndale.
The students of Cornell have set out to raise $2000 for the purpose of furnishing an eight-oared crew for the races. $500 has already been raised.
Dr. Huebner, the noted Latin scholar of the University of Berlin has been elected to fill the place of Professor Newton Warren in the Johns Hopkins University.
At Cornell recently the freshmen won the cane rush after a desperate two-hours' conflict. The victory was celebrated by a procession through the streets of Ithaca. There were nearly 800 students in the rush.
The following statistics have been gleaned from the 101 voters in the senior and junior classes of Princeton. There are 62 Republicans, 27 Democrats, 3 Prohibitionists, 6 doubtful, 2 did not care, and 1 Socialist.
The Princeton eleven has arranged for nine practice games, six of which will be played at Princeton. Two will be with the U. of P., two with Rutgers, and one with Johns Hopkins, Lehigh, Crescents of Brooklyn, Stevens, and Lafayette.
The disorder and "rush" that marked the opening of Columbia College was not very creditable to the students or the institution that permits it. "Rushes" and hazing are two "sports" that all sensible men wish to see abolished. There is nothing amusing or instructive or smart about them. They don't even develop a student's biceps, and about all they accomplish is to give the tailors plenty to do in repairing the damage done to clothes. The Columbia faculty ought to come down upon the guilty young men like avenging angels.- New York Star.
Read more in News
Notice.