Rev. Francis G. Peabody, D. D., will conduct the services in Appleton Chapel to-morrow evening.
The reading room of the Classical Department has been removed from Sever 28 to Sever 25.
W. D. Clark, '89, has resigned his position as managing editor of the CRIMSON, and I. A. Ruland, '89, has been elected in his place.
Today is the last day for re-engaging College Rooms, also the last day for receiving applications for Second-Year Honors.
At the senior class-meeting last night, C. T. Sempers was elected class day poet in place of L. McK. Garrison, resigned.
There will be a theme due in French 2, April 2, on Cinna, de Corneille; and another April 13, on Histoire de la Formation de la Declinaison Francaise.
The fourth and last special report in History XVIII is due on or before May 1. The subjects given out relate to the cause of the revolutionary war.
A challenge has been received by the Columbia freshmen from the Yale freshmen to row them a two mile race on the Thames at New London within a week of the Yale-Harvard 'Varsity race. The Columbia men favor such a proposition, but acting on the advice of the boat club, they will probably refuse the challenge.
The tickets for the Boston performances of the Hasty Pudding theatricals, to take place April 19, 20 and 21, are on sale at 9 Weld from 5 to 6 o'clock every day.
Professor Goodale will deliver the twelfth and last lecture of his Lowell Institute course this evening at Huntington Hall, Boston. The subject will be "Some Relations of Forests to Art."
Mr. J. Lawrence Laughlin, of the political economy department of the college, has resigned his professorship and accepted the position of manager of a fire insurance company of Philadelphia.
The Boston Handel and Hadyn Society will give "Judas Maccabaeus" tomorrow evening in Music Hall. Soloists: Mrs. Giulia Valda, Miss Emily Winant, Mr. George J. Parker, Mr. Max Heinrich, Mr. Carl Zerrahn, conductor; Mr. B. J. Lang, organist.
The members of one of the tables at Memorial Hall recently took dinner together at the Revere House, Boston. The following day, a Boston daily paper contained the following in reference to the dinner:-
"The waiters in the Memorial Hall at Harvard College had their annual banquet last evening at the Revere House. Fourteen were present."
"Bob" Cook, to the great delight of all Yale men, made his appearance at New Harven yesterday. He was enthusiastically greeted, and escorted to the new training table. After dinner he was closeted with Captain Stevenson and ex-Captain Cowles. Cook is very reticent in giving information about the crew; he does not commit himself even so far as to state its strength compared with those of former years. He went out in the afternoon to look the men over and see what progress they had made with the stroke. it is highly probable that there will be a considerable weeding out of the candidates soon, and the selection of the crew that is to race with Harvard will be made immediately after. The men are in excellent condition, owing in a large measure to the conscientious supervision of Captain Stevenson.
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