There was a cut in History 11 yesterday.
The midyear marks in Physics 3 are out.
Field work in Natural History 8 will begin today.
There will be no lecture in Greek 10 tomorrow.
Signor Romero is training the Guitar and Mandolin Club.
Dinner at Memorial will be served from six to seven this term.
Professor Bocher will lecture tomorrow on "Moliere" in French 1.
The cost of board at Memorial during March was $4.09 a week.
There will be an hour examination in Political Economy 1 tomorrow.
The marks of the last hour examination in Political Economy 4 will not be given out.
The special reports in History 17 are to be handed in next Saturday instead of today.
The freshman Glee Club will give a concert at Jamaica Plain in about a week and another in Cambridge April 28th.
FRESHMAN BANJO CLUB-Rehearsal Thursday at 4.30. It is important that everyone be present.
The Boston performances of the Hasty Pudding theatricals will be given next Thursday, Friday, and Saturday.
The Banjo Club will play in costume at the cadets' benefit at the Boston Theatre tomorrow afternoon and Saturday evening.
The Pierian will give a concert for the Malden Lawn Tennis Club April 17, and one for the Young Ladies Club of Brighton on April 23.
Professor Cohn will give a lecture in Brattle hall this evening before the Cambridge Social Union on "Personal Recollections of the Siege of Paris."
The trustees of Columbia college offer a prize of $600 to the student passing the best entrance examination to the School of Arts.
The race between the Yale crew and the Atlantas of New York will be rowed May 24 in the New Haven harbor, some time after ten o'clock in the morning.
There are about two hundred entries for the championship games of the Amateur Athletic Union Saturday night; one hundred and five individual athletes will compete.
The debate of the Harvard Union postponed from March 27, will take place tonight in Sever 11 at 7.30. The question for discussion is, "Resolved, That Congress should regulate congressional and presidential elections in the states." The principal disputants on the affirmative are H. E. Grigor, Sp., and J, M. Pereins, '92, on the negative, R. C. Surbridge, L. S., and G. B. Woomer, '91.
Judge Jeremiah Smith of Dover, N. H., has been chosen to fill the Story professorship in the Law School, made vacant by the departure of Professor William A. Keener. Judge Smith was graduated from Harvard in the class of '56. Since that time he has been engaged in the practice of law and has occupied a position on the supreme court bench of New Hampshire. He therefore comes to Cambridge well qualified to fill the position to which he has been chosen.
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