Candidates for the Mott Haven team run every day at 12.
There is one Japanese student at Wellesly, Miss Kin Kato.
C. H. Page, '91, has left college temporarily on account of illness.
There will be an hour examination in Philosophy 2, today.
The University of Toronto has a modern language club, of which Sir Daniel Wilson, president of the university, is president.
Wadsworth, '91, has left college and has gone into business in Boston.
Members of the freshman class of Princeton have formed a Kennel Club.
The class of '91, Tufts College, will have a supper at Young's April 10.
The senior tug-of-war team is in training to pull Columbia Saturday afternoon.
Five men at Princeton are practicing for the football kicking contests which will occur in the first spring games.
Professor Hart will not be able to meet his classes again until after the recess. Professor Taussig will lecture in History 17 and Mr. Currier in History 12.
The Columbia College Dramatic Club will produce a piece entitled "William Penn," on the evenings of April 24, 25, 26, and 27 for the benefit of the university crew.
A number of Yale students found themselves charged on their term bills for pieces of the old fence which were found in their rooms. The janitor had been ordered to search the rooms. The item has caused much indignation.
Hour examinations will be held on Friday, March 29, in N. H. 4, 8, and 14 at the following places and hours: N. H. 4, Sever 35 and 37. at 12 m.; N. H. 8, Museum, room 2, 10 a. m.; N. H. 14, Museum, room 1, 9 a. m.
The Princeton base ball team was measured for suits last Friday. Their suits will be entirely different from those of preceding years, being of gray cloth with "Princeton" on the breast. The blazer and stockings will be orange and black.
George S. Morris, the well-known professor of philosophy at University of Michigan, died at Ann Arbor, Michigan, last Sunday. He graduated at Dartmouth in '61, and was a tutor there in '63-'64. Later he studied in Germany. In 1870 he was appointed a professor of modern languages and literature in the University of Michigan. He was appointed lecturer in ethics, history and philosophy in Johns Hopkins University in 1878, and professor of philosophy in the University of Michigan in 1881.
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Tennis Notes.