Last night was strawberry night at the Hasty Pudding.
Charles T. Sempers, '88, has been elected an editor of the Monthly.
The base ball cage at Princeton was destroyed by a recent storm, in which some other buildings also suffered.
Monday was Commencement day at Vassar College. Thirty-six degrees of Master of Arts, beside three others, were conferred.
The third annual tournament of the New England Tennis Association, began yesterday on the grounds of the New Haven Tennis Club.
The final run of the Bicycle Club which was to have been held yesterday afternoon, with dinner at Auburndale, was postponed on account of rain.
The annual meet of American Wheelmen is now in progress at Baltimore, Md. About 1500 delegates are present, representing clubs in all parts of the United States and Canada.
The Glee Club sang in Boston Music Hall last evening at a promenade concert. The programme included "Dearest Awake," "Johnny Harvard," "Schneider's Band," and other songs.
Second year honors in classics have been awarded as follows: Highest honors-Phillip Stanley Abbot, Reynolds Driver Brown, Arthur Winfred Hodgman, George Rublee. Honors-Frederick Melvin Brown, Harry Edwin Burton, Lewis Henry Dow, Charles Mayo Eaton, Martin Edward Gill, Richard Calhoun Harrison, Ralph Hoffman, Edward Parker Kelly, Maurice Whittemore Mather, Henry Tyler Perry.
Final honors in classics have been awarded to Charles Haven Goodwin, Francis Demetrius Kalopathakes, Richard Clarke Manning, jr., John William Henry Walden.
The Harvard crew did not row on the afternoon of their arrival at New London, but took a long walk. Hereafter they will row twice a day until the 28th. Yale is taking short pulls and paying much attention to starts.
Physics A:- Alder-Dudley, Sever 37; Duff-E. J. Gould, Sever 30; Grees-Jerris, Sever 24; Jewett-Miller, Sever 35; Mills-Pease, Sever 18; Peckham-Sever, Sever 17; Shaw-Walcott, Sever 6; Walker-Wynne, Sever 5.
The failure of the B. and O. dividends has forced a policy of retrenchment upon Johns Hopkins University. Scholarships are to be cut down, and the professors' salaries will suffer next if the railroad passes the next dividend.
Miss Amelie Rives, the author of "The Quick or the Dead" and other works that recently have attracted attention in the literary world, was married at Charlottesville, Va., recently. The groom is Mr. John Armstrong Chanler of New York, a wealthy grandson of John Jacob Astor.
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