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University Calendar.

APRIL 30. SUNDAY.

Appleton Chapel, 7.30p.m. Rev. Leighton Parks, D. D.

(The front pews will be reserved for members of the University until 7.30 Members of the University are requested to enter by the south door.)

* Week-day morning prayers begin at 8.45 a. m. No seats are assigned, either for officers or for classes.

Rev. Leighton Parks, D.D., will conduct prayers from May 1-9.

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The Preacher conducting morning prayers may be found at Wadsworth House 1 every week-day during his term of service.

Dr. Parks may be found at Wadsworth House 1 daily from 9-11.

MAY 1. MONDAY.Last day for receiving from persons intending to enter College applications for Price Greenleaf Aid for 1893-94.

Last day for receiving dissertations for the Toppan, Dante, Sargent, and Sumner Prizes.

Last day for receiving dissertations for the Toppan, Dante, Sargent, and Sumner Prizes.

Last day for receiving applications of Professional Students who wish to be candidates for the degree of A.M. with a professional degree.

Philosophy 9 (Education and Teaching.) The Theory of Classical Education. Mr. B. F. Bailey. Sever 8, 3.30 p. m.

Open to all members of the University. Faculty of Arts and Sciences. University 5, 4 p. m.

Lecture. Morphogenesis. III. The Scope of the Morphogenic Problem. Mr. C. B. Davenport Zoological Museum (5th floor,) 4.30p.m.

Open to persons interested in theoretical biology.

Seminary in Economics. Georgia's Experiment in State Railway Management. Mr. G. Walcott. University 23, 430 p. m. Seminary of American History and Institutions. The Exploration of Coronado.

Mr. George P. Winship. University 20, 4.30p.m.

Semitic Conference. Sever7.15 p. m. Lecture. Macaulay. Mr. E. Charlton Black Sever 11, 7.30 p. m. Open to the public.

2. TUESDAY.Last day for receiving applications for College Rooms for 1803-94.

Seminary of Classical Philology. Certain Forms of Future Supposition in Herodotus. Mr. C. B. Stetson.-Themistocles in Athens in 462 B. C. Mr. E. D. Marsh. Sever 13. 2.30p.m.

Open to all students in Greek and Latin courses.

Mathematical Seminary. Double surfaces. Mr. H. L. Coar. University 19, 3.30 p. m.

The lecture will be followed by a discussion of problems to be announced on the bulletin board.

Open to all members of the University. Illustrated Lecture. Babylonian before the time of Hammurabi (4000-2300 B. C.). Professor D. G. Lyon. Boylston Hall, 7.30 p.m.

The public are invited. Geological Conference. Mr. R. A. Daly, "Secular Disintegration of Rocks" (postponed from last week); Mr. L.S. Griswold, "On some Triassic Sections"; Mr. H. L. Harris, "A comparison of soil conditions in glaciated and non-glaciated regions." Geological Laboratory, 7.45 p. m.

3. WEDNESDAY.Lecture. Principles of Historical Criticism. Aids to the Study of History. Professor Ephraim Emerton. Harvard 1, 4.30 p. m.

Open to the public. Teachers and persons intending to become teachers are especially invited.

Divinity School. Conference. Divinity Chapel, 4.30 p. m.

Modern Language Conference. Goethe's estimate of Lenz. Dr. Max Winkler, of the University of Berlin.-The ethical doctrine of measure in the Middle Ages. Professor Marsh. Sever 2. 7.30 p. m.

Open to all students in Modern Language courses.

Bowdoin Prize Dissertation. The Origin of Variations in Organism. Mr. E. A. Burt. Sever 5, 7.30 p. m.

Open to the public.

Reading. Shakespeare's Comedy "As You Like It. Mr. J. J. Hayes, Sever 11, 8 p. m.

Open to the public.

4. THURSDAY.Assignment of College Rooms for 1893-94.

English 6. Oral Debate. Harvard 6, 3.30 p. m.

Question: Resolved, That the pending bill for Irish Home Rule is for the benefit of the British empire." Principal Disputants.-Affirmative: S. M. Ballou and E. C. Jewell.-Negative: E.P. Jose and C. H. Lincoln.

Open to all students of the University. Lecture. On some Special Devices for Mental Training. Professor Josiah Royce. Sanders Theatre, 4.30 p. m.

Open to the public. Teachers and persons intending to become teachers are especially invited.

5. FRIDAY.Lecture. Homeric Vocabulary. Mr. C.P.Parker. Harvard 1, 4.30 p. m.

Open to teachers or persons intending to become teachers.

Divinity School. Preaching Service Mr. J.M. Wathen. Divinity Chapel, 7.30 p. m.

Open to the public. Wendell Phillips Club. Regular Meeting and Debate. University 16, 7.30 p. m.

6. SATURDAYBoylston Prizes for Elocution, Preliminary Trial of all candidates. Sanders Theatre, 8 a. m.

Candidates will speak in alphabetical order, with such changes of order as regular Saturday recitations and lectures may require. The time of each speaker will be strictly limited to five minutes.

LECTURES ON ASSYRIAN HISTORY.Professor D. G. Lyon will give four illustrated lectures on Babylonian Assyrian history, in Boylston Hall, on Tuesdays at 7.30 p. m., beginning May 2.

The several topics are as follows:

May 2.-Babylonia before the time of Hammurabi (4 00-2300B.C.)

May 9.-Hammurabi and the Kassites (2300-1200 B.C.)

May 10.-Assyria before the time of the Sargonides (1800-722 B.C.)

May 23- The Triumph and Fall of Nineveh. The New Babylonian Empire (722-538 B. C.)

The public are invited.

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