The students of Phillips Exeter have adopted a school constitution.
A debate has been arranged between Berkeley and Leland Stanford university.
Nearly one-third of the Williams College students have full or partial scholarships.
Two complete nines will be maintained at the University of Pennsylvania this spring.
E. R. Matthews '96, F. S. Hoppin '96, and A. K. Moe '97, have been elected to the Lampoon.
M. F. Sweeney, champion amateur high jumper will compete in the B. A. A. games, Feb. 10.
Mr. Hayes will make his annual visit to the Groton School, at Groton, Mass., on Thursday night.
An authorized memoir of Dr. Francis Parkman '44 is to be prepared under direction of his family.
John C. Carey has presented the theological school library of Boston University with five hundred volumes.
Eton College was founded in 1441 by Henry VI. Gladstone, Lord Salisbury and Balfour attended this college.
The Amherst freshman statistics show that the average age is about 19 years and the average weight 134 pounds.
Professor Charles Eliot Norton has written a preface to a recent translation of Dante's Divine Comedy by T. W. Parsons.
Abscences are not reported at the University of Chicago until the end of the year. A student having more than thirty is required to take an extra course for the next year.
The work on the libretto and score of "Priscilla," the opera to be presented in the interests of general athletics at Brown, is nearly completed.
The J. Wesley Ladd prizes at Amherst for excellence in composition and delivery of orations during the first term of junior year, are to be the volume of orations and addresses of George William Curtis.
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