Mr. Pillsbury lectured in History 1 yesterday.
Some of the seats are being moved from Jarvis to Holmes.
The Banjo club will play at the Cambridge Social Union next week.
P. S. Stebbins, Sp., and T. T. Chave, '91, have left college.
Schiller's tragedy of Wallenstein will be begun in German 3 next week.
There was an unannounced examination in Political Economy 6 yesterday.
Three members of the Harvard Rowing Club upset yesterday afternoon in front of the Weld Boat House.
The Hasty Pudding Club will give another performance of the Easter theatricals in Cambridge.
The mass meeting at Yale to take action on the report of the dual league committee will be held tonight.
There will be an examination about May 10 in the division of History 15 devoted to diplomatic history.
The subjects for special reports in History 12 will be announced Monday; Professor Mac Vane has taken charge of the course.
The freshmen played a game with the second varsity nine on Divinity field yesterday afternoon. No score was kept.
Cornell's new library, begun about a year ago, will cost when completed $260,000 and will accommodate 475,000 volumes. The present library contains 109,000 volumes.
Harvard men certainly appreciate the new boat house. Yesterday morning the janitor found several men already there when he arrived at half past eight. The house was full of visitors all day, and the river was covered with craft.
Captain Woodruff of the '89 crew is coaching the Yale eight. He says that the shell settles badly and that the crew needs much practice. Brewster and Noyes, he thinks, are doing the best work of any men in the boat
At the A. A. U. games tomorrow only trial heats will be run in the afternoon. Trials will also be held in the standing broad jump, pole vault, and hop-step and jump, and only the best six men in each event will be eligible to compete in the evening.
Yale came dangerously near being defeated by the University of Pennsylvania Wednesday. A batting streak, which brought in four runs in the ninth inning and made the score 6 to 5 in Yale's favor was all that saved her. Stagg and Poole were Yale's battery.
The Carey gymnasium will now soon be ready for occupation. The carpenters are working very hard and hope to have all completed within a few weeks. The lockers are all in, and the floors, the hand ball rooms and the ball cage are nearly done.
The Cosmopolitan Magazine offers scholarship prizes aggregating $600 to the three students who obtain the largest number of subscriptions for the magazine before September 15. The first prize is three hundred dollars, the second two hundred, and the third one hundred.
The list of rooms for the academic year 1890-91, for which application may be made before May 2 has been issued from the Bursar's office. In Hollis two rooms will be vacant, in Stoughton two, in Holworthy three, and in the other buildings larger numbers.
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