There will be an hour examination in German I b. today.
The first thesis in Philosophy XI. will be due tomorrow.
Brainard, Yale '91, died of typhoid fever Thursday.
About twenty more men can be admitted to Fine Arts 4.
Amherst will play Trinity at Amherst today-a championship game.
The sale of reserved seats for the Yale game will begin tomorrow.
The new editors of the CRIMSON gave a theatre party to the board Saturday night.
The annual game on Saturday between St. Marks and Groton academies resulted in art, each side scoring twenty-six points. J. H. Hunt, '92, was referee.
Over two hundred Yale men have already signed to go to the Harvard game at Springfield.
Williams is to have a new recitation building to be known as the Hopkins Memorial. Its cost is estimated at $109.000.
The Yale News complains that the 'varsity eleven gets poor practice from the second eleven.
Foxhall Keene, '91, who was injured in Friday's practice will not be able to play again this season.
A base ball league is being formed which will include Columbia, Lafayette, Brown, and U. of P.
During the month of September 1700 new volumes were added to the Columbia college library.
The corner stone of the new library building at Cornell was laid Wednesday with appropriate ceremonies.
The freshman class at Columbia numbers one hundred and fifty-six of whom ninety four are classical and sixty-two are scientific.
The following men go to the training table of the freshmen eleven today: Ellsworth, Vail, Cummings, Hill, Johnson, Brice, Kendricken, Davis.
A meeting of the Intercollegiat Football association will be held in New York today. Wagenhurst of the Princeton team will probably be protested, and it is rumored there will be several other men protested also.
The following questions will be presented by the executive committee at the Harvard Union this evening: 1, That the tariff tends to foster trusts; 2, That the World's Fair should be held in Chicago; 3, That the result of the Pan-American congress will be beneficial to the United States.
Princeton defeated Wesleyan in a championship game at the Berkeley oval Sa urday by a score of 94 to nothing. Wesleyan could do nothing whatever with Princeton's heavy rushers, who played a remarkably strong game. Dartmouth defeated Tech at Boston by a score of 42 to 6. At the end of the first half the score was only 12 to 6, but at that time some of Tech's best players were compelled to retire, and Dartmouth had it all her own way the second half. Lehigh beat Columbia at New York 51 to 6.
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Chess Tournament.