The Monthly will probably be out tomorrow.
There was a make up examination in History 13 Saturday.
The biennial examinations at Yale begin Tuesday, December 10.
Only about twelve Ninety-three men accompanied the team to New Haven.
The senior class at Princeton will hold its class day elections December 11th.
Rooms 32 and 50 College house, recently renovated, are to let at reduced rates.
Hon. Roswell G. Hoar will lecture at Amherst, December 7, on the labor question.
The sophomore class of Columbia has a debt of over $600 left from the crew last June.
Professor Shaler has an article in the December Chatauquan on "The Work of Underground Water," that treats on some of the ground covered in N. H. 4.
Lehigh University has introduced a course in architecture leading to the degree of B. S. Lacrosse has lately been introduced at Cornell, and is being played with great enthusiasm. Max Winkler, '89, is assistant in English at the University of Kansas in Lawrenceville, Kansas.
The freshmen marched around the yard cheering the team on their return Saturday night.
There will probably be a celebration tonight by the freshmen in honor of Saturday's victory.
All the musical societies at Brown will unite in a joint concert, to be given at Sayles hall, December 11.
Among the holiday books brought out by the Scribners is "Aspects of the Earth," by Professor N. S. Shaler.
W. R. Baird, of New York, is about to publish a new and revised edition of his "American College Fraternities."
According to the auditor's account the price of board at Memorial for September and October has been four dollars per week.
Dana, '91, is captain of the Princeton nine this year. All of last year's team have returned with the exception of King and Brownlee.
The New York Evening Post is publishing a series of articles in the Friday issues on "College Athletic Management." The first paper discusses the plans in use at Princeton, Williams, Dartmouth, Lehigh and the University of Virginia.
The Yale correspondent of the New York Evening Post says that since the defeat by Princeton the majority of the undergraduates at Yale are against withdrawing from the foot ball association. It adds that many influential graduates are in favor of a dual league with Harvard in spite of the defeat by Princeton.
The Nation, in its "Correspondence" column, publishes a letter protesting against the indifference to the study of pedagogy, shown at all the universities in this country, and at Harvard most notably because that is the largest and most progressive of the colleges.
Read more in News
'Varsity Crew Notice.