F. L. Dean, '88, has left the Law school.
The next forensic in English D will be due about March 1st.
Cornell University was awarded a gold medal at the Paris exposition for its educational exhibit.
The Intercollegiate Athletic association will meet in Boston tomorrow. All colleges in the association will send delegates, as important business will come before the meeting.
J. H. McDonald '91, captain of this year's Wesleyan eleven has left college in order to enter the ministry.
Professor Sheldon will meet all men who desire to take Romance Philosophy 4 on Monday, February 10, at 3 p. m.
Talcott H. Russell has been appointed professor of statute law and the laws of municipal corporation in the Yale Law School.
The lesson for German A Monday, will be in Bernhardt's Lesbuchen vol. II second part pp. 4 6 inclusive: "Derarme Ausikout and sein Kollege."
In German 1b Hauff's "Lichtenstein" will be read after the midyears. Students are requested to prepare pages 11 to 14 inclusive for Monday, February 10.
The oldest living graduate in the United States is Amos F. Parker, of Fitzwilliam, N. H. He graduated from the University of Vermont in 1813 and is nearly 98 years of age.
Co-education is evidently a success at the University of Michigan. The senior class, in choosing their class day officers, elected a Miss Harrat poetess.
This year's catalogue of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology just out shows the total number of students to be nine hundred and nine, a substantial gain over last year.
The Mapes brothers will again represent Columbia in the Intercollegiate games this spring. Besides these men the following members of last year's team are in college and will be on the team: Vosburgh, Shipman, McIlvaine, Welsh, Himan, Collis, Hornbostel, Connell and Hooper. When it is considered how near Columbia came to winning the cup last year, it would seem that her chances this year are very good.
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