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University Calendar.

30. Saturday.Applications from Graduate Students for admission to examination for any degree should be made on or before this date.

Last day for receiving applications from students in the Professional Schools to be qualified for the degree of A. M. in 1898.

Last day for receiving from persons intending to enter College applications for Price Greenleaf Aid for 1898-99.

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

Notice of intention to compete for the Sales Prize must be given on or before this date.

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Last day for receiving theses of Candidates for the degree of Ph. D. or S. D.

Graduate Club. Possibilities of Modern Naval Warfare. Professor Hollis. Harvard 1, 8 p. m. Open to members of the Club and of the Faculty.

May 1. Sunday.St Paul's Society. Settlement Work in connection with the Pro-Cathedral. Rt. Rev. Henry C. Potter, D. D., of New York, N. Y. Holden Chapel, 4.30 p. m. Open to the public.

Appleton Chapel, 7.30 p. m. The William Belden Noble Lectures. VI. Christ's Mission to the Family. Rt. Rev. Henry C. Potter, D. D., of New York, N. Y.

Rev. W. H. P. Faunce, D. D., will conduct moring prayers from May 3 to May 20.

Dr. Faunce may be found at Wadsworth House 1 daily from 9 till 11.

2. Monday.Last day for receiving applications for College Rooms for 1898-99.

Seminary of American History and Institutions. Military Land Bounties. Mr. L. F. Crawford. University 24, 3.30 p. m.

Seminary of Economics. Antonio Serra and the Beginnings of Political Economy in Italy. Mr. D. F. Grass. University 23, 4.30 p. m.

Lectures on the Civil War. V. Capture of Vicksburg. John Fiske, LL. D. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 4.30 p. m. Admission by ticket only.

Radcliffe College. Lectures on Kindergarten Principles and Methods. VII. Froebel and Herbart. Miss Laura Fisher. Fay House, 4.30 p. m. Open to all members of the University and of Radcliffe College.

Modern Language Conference. Spenser and the Pleiade. Mr. J. B. Fletcher.- Recent Investigations on the Chronology of Petrarch's Canzoniere. Professor March. 44 Thayer Hall, 8 p. m.

3. Tuesday.Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Meeting at University 5, 4 p. m.

Geological Conference. Papers: (1) Recent Studies of Earthquakes. (2) Landslip Erosion in Norway. Professor Reusch.- Note on a New Mineral. Dr. A. S. Eakle. Geological Laboratory, Room 2, M. Z., 7.45 p. m.

Divinity School. Faculty Meeting. 17 Quincy Street, 8 p. m.

5. Thursday.Seminary of Classical Philology. Open Meeting. Papers: The Daphnis Myth. Mr. H. W. Prescott.- Virgil's Text of Theocritus. Mr. E. M. Rankin. Classical Library, Harvard 2, 8 p. m.

6. Friday.Divinity School. Preaching Service. Mr. G. W. Hinman. Divinity Chapel, 7.30 p. m. Open to the public.

7. Saturday.Boylston Prize Speaking. The preliminary trial will take place in Sanders Theatre, beginning at 9.30 a. m. Candidates will be called on in alphabetic order.

Geological Excursion in Essex County, conducted by Mr. J. H. Sears. Open to all members of the University. Members will leave the Union Station for Salem at 9 a. m. Dr. Jaggar will have charge of the party from Cambridge.

Lectures at the Arnold Arboretum.Mr. J. G. Jack will conduct a series of Lectures and Field Meetings at the Arnold Arboretum during May and June for the purpose of supplying popular instruction about the Trees and Shrubs which grow in New England. They will be held on Saturday mornings at 10 o'clock and on Wednesday afternoons at 3 o'clock, beginning on Saturday, May 7, and closing June 25.

The course is open to both men and women.

The fee for the course is $6.00, payable in advance.

Applications or further inquiries may be addressed to Mr. J. G. Jack, Jamaica Plain, Mass.

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