MAY 13. SUNDAY.Appleton Chapel, 7.30 p. m. Rev. S. M. Crothers of St. Paul, Minn.
(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.)
Rev. S. M. Crothers will conduct prayers from May 14-16.
Mr. Crothers may be found at Wadsworth House 1 daily from 9-11.
14. MONDAY.President and Fellows of Harvard College. Meeting at 50 State street, Boston, 11 a. m.
Divinity School Faculty. Meeting at Divinity Chapel, 3 p. m.
Seminary of American History and Institutios. The Colonial Government of Rhode Island. Mr. A. M. Mowry. University 20, 3.30 p. m.
Open to all members of the Unversity.
Commencement Parts. Writers of Commencement Parts will meet Professor A. S. Hill in Sever 1 at 4.30 p. m.
The Parts will then be returned for revision, and appointments with the Committee of the Academic Council will be made.
Lecture (repeated under the auspices of the St. Paul's Society). Meetinghouse or Church; the Importance of Beauty in our Places of Worship. Mr. R. A. Cram, Architect, of Boston. Sever 11, 7.30 p. m,
Open to the public.
15. TUESDAY.English 6. Oral Debate. Harvard 1, 3.30 p. m.
Question: "Resolved, That all officers of the federal government except cabinet officers, should be prohibited from taking any active part in political discussion or party organization."
Principal disputants.- Affirmative: W. F. Williams.- Negative: C. H. Beckwith.
Open to all students of the University.
Faculty of Arts and Sciences. University 5, 4 p. m.
Geological Conference. Papers: Some Homologies of the Atlantic Coast Line, Mr. C. Abbe, Jr.; The South-eastern Border of the Narragansett Basin, Mr. N. S. Easton; The Northern Border of the Narragansett Basin, Mr. C. F. Marbut. Geological Laboratory, 7.45 p. m.
16. WEDNESDAY.Lecture. Egypt at the Dawn of History. Mrs. C. Stevenson. Peabody Museum, 3.30 p. m.
Pedagogical Seminary. High School Extension. Mr. D. S. Sanford. Sever 8, 4.30 p. m.
Open to all members of the University interested in Secondary Education.
Seminary in Economics. Compulsory Insurance in Germany. Mr. J. G. Brooks. University 23, 7.30 p. m.
Dudleian Lecture. (The First Anniversary Lecture). "The proving, explaining and proper use and improvement of the principles of natural religion, as it is commonly called and understood by divines and learned men." Rev. S. M. Crothers. Appleton Chapel, 7.30 p. m.
Open to the public.
Harvard Religious Union. Some Phases of Religious Life in India. Swami Vivekananda. Sever 11, 8 p. m.
Open to the public.
Lecture on the Application of Science to the Useful Arts. Wave Lengths of Electricity. Mr. St. John. Jefferson Physical Laboratory, 8 p. m.
Open to the public.
17. THURSDAY.English 6. Oral Debate. Harvard 1, 3.30 p. m.
Question: "Resolved, That cabinet ministers should be allowed to take part in the debates of Congress."
Principal Disputants.- Affirmative: D. King and W. R. Travis.- Negative: W. S. Hockley and M. S. Hyman.
Open to all students of the University.
Concert. Annual Spring Concert of the Harvard Glee, Banjo and Mandolin Clubs, and the Pierian Sodality. Sanders Theatre, 8 p. m.
18. FRIDAY.Divinity School. Preaching Service. Divinity Chapel, 7.30 p. m.
Open to the public.
Harvard Engineering Society. Railway Signaling. Mr. A. H. Johnson. Jefferson Physical Laboratory, 7.45 p. m.
Open to the public.
Wendell Phillips Club. The Need of Able Public Speakers. Governor F. T. Greenhalge. Sanders Theatre, 8 p. m. Second balcony open to the public.
ADDRESS BY SWAMI VIVEKANANDA.On the evening of Wednesday, May 16, at 8 o'clock, in Sever 11, an address will be given under the auspices of the Harvard Religious Union by Swami Vivekananda, a Hindoo monk. The public are invited. Vivekananda is an adherent of the ancient Brahmin faith of India, and was for eight years the disciple of the sage Ram Krishna. He is well qualified, both by his attainments in native learning and by unusual gifts of eloquence, to expound to a western audience the beliefs of his countrymen. His addresses at the World's Parliament of Religions have attracted great attention.
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AMUSEMENTS.