Marks are out in French A.
Theme V in English B was due yesterday rewritten and corrected.
Seven Yale men will compete in the Boston Athletic association games.
The following rooms are to let: Thayer 35; Holyoke 17, 47; College House 10, 23, 45, 48, 65; Divinity 6, 20, 24, 26, 38; Foxcroft 2.
A. W. Weysse, '91, has left college temporarily on account of ill health.
The new edition of the Outlines in History 13 and 17 will be ready next Tuesday.
R. W. Gifford, '92, has gone south for his health, and will not return to college this year.
E. B. Walker, '92, has left college and will enter the Eastman Business College at Poughkeepsie, New York.
Ginn and Co. announce an edition of Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales," with notes by Mr. G. L. Kittredge, of the English department.
A detailed criticism of the Yale crew in Tuesday's Yale News closes with the following general comment on the candidates: "As a crew no two men row like, they show entire lack of the distinctive features of the stroke, a general tendency to swing away from oar on catch and toward oar on recovery, necessity for a brace up all around and stricter attention to business."
The Cornell Sun is overcome with surprise in learning from the article in the Spirit of the Times, from which extracts were recently printed in the CRIMSON, that Yale does not claim the boating championship of American colleges. Cornell, the Sun says, defeated Bowdoin on Lake Quinsigamond, July 5, 1887, by two feet. The argument advanced by the Spirit of the Times, if supplemented by this fact clearly gives the championship to Cornell. Certainly the Yale News and the Harvard Crimson, in endorsing the statements of the Spirit of the Times make this concession. If Yale does not now claim the championship nothing now remains to be said about the matter.
Read more in News
Examinations Tomorrow.