There are at present forty men on the waiting list at Memorial.
The Yale Depew battalion did not take part in Monday's procession.
The Yale freshmen beat the Hartford high school last Saturday 62-0.
Section 3 in English 12, from Hecht to Suck. will meet Mr. Wendell today.
There are thirty-seven Japnaese students at the University of Michigan.
The Princeton Glee Club at the annual Easter trip will go as far west as Chicago.
Williams plays Amherst at Amherst and Lafayette plays University of Pennsylvania at Easton the afternoon.
A chess tournament is now in progress at Columbia to decide the representatives for the intercollegiate tournment.
The Yale-Harvard game will not be played in New York this year. It has has not been decided where it will take place.
By the unexpected closing of Leavitt and Pierce's on Monday evening the notices for the CRIMSON left there could not be published in yesterday's issue.
The editors of the Lehigh Burr are excused from literary work in their courses similar to that performed by them in their connection with the paper.
The Harvard Tariff Reform Association sent out postals requesting some of the members to help at the polls in Boston. A number of men went in to the South End yesterday.
There will be some private theatricals at Union Hall, Boston, in aid of the Associated Charities on the evenings of Nov. 10 and 12 at 8 o'clock. Tickets are on sale at Doll and Richards, Park St., Boston.
There are six college graduates in President Cleveland's cabinet: Secretaries Fairchild and Endicott, of Harvard; Whitney, of Yale; Vilas and Dickinson of the University of Wisconsin; and Garland, of St. Mary's College.
Mass. 3 was filled yesterday by the members of History 13 and a great many outsiders who came to hear Professor Hart's lecture on Presidential Elections. The system of choosing the presidential electors was explained and the history of the elections since the time of Washington were discussed at length. This was done partly to give an opportunity to the voting men of the class to go home and cast their ballots without losing a lecture, and partly to give an idea to the rest of the class of the manner of conducting elections today.
Among the collegians who have made their mark on the diamond are Hutchinson of Yale, (Des Moines); Dwyer, of Hobert College, (Chicago); Garfield, of Oberlin, (Toledo); Bingham, of Harvard, (Easton); Turner, of Amherst, (Easton); Ray, of Maine State College, (Boston); Forrest Goodwin, of Colby, (Salem); Knowlton, of Harvard, (Salem and Easton); Viau, of Dartmouth, Cincinnati); Vinton, of Yale, (Lowell); Besset, of Brown, (Indianapolis); Stewart, of Amherst, (Troy). Ward and O'Rourke have both taken legal degrees at Yale and are full-fledged members of the bar.
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Harvard Gun Club.