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University Calendar.

*Open to the public. **Open to the University.

Saturday, Feb. 1.

Second Half-year begins in the Medical and Dental Schools.

Sunday, Feb. 2.

*Appleton Chapel, 7.30 p.m. Rev. Paul Revere Frothingham, S.T.B., of Boston. Rev. Paul Revere Frothingham will conduct morning prayers February 4 and February 5. Rev. George Hodges, D.D., will conduct morning prayers from February 6 to February 8. Mr. Frothingham may be found at Wadsworth House 1 daily from 9 till 11.

Tuesday, Feb. 4.

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

Chamber Concert. Kneisel Quartet, assisted by Mrs. Bertha Tapper. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 7.45 p.m. Tickets on sale at Sever's University Book Store, Harvard Square. Programme: Mendelssohn, Quartet in D major, op. 44, No. 1; Caesar Franck, Larghetto and Scherzo from Quarter in D major; Schumann, Quintet for Pianoforte, two Violins, Viola, and Violoncello in E flat major, op. 44.

Thursday, Feb. 6.

*Vesper Service. Appleton Chapel, 5 p.m.

**Harvard Christian Association. Devotional Meeting. Election of officers for 1902-03. Mr. W. M. Crane. Phillips Brooks House, 7 p.m.

Friday, Feb. 7.

**University Tea. Phillips Brooks House, 4 to 6 p.m.

Appleton Chapel--Sunday Evenings.

Feb. 9.--Rev. W. R. Huntington, D.D., of New York.

Feb. 16.--Rev. Professor W. W. Fenn, S.T.B., of Cambridge.

Feb. 23.--Rev. Edward Cummings, A.M., of Boston.

Chamber Concerts.

Tuesday evenings, February 4, March 4 and April 1.

Symphony Concerts.

Thursday evenings, February 18, March 13, April 10 and April 24.

Lectures on History of Classical Studies.

Professor Morgan will give a course of fifteen lectures on the "History of Classical Studies," intended primarily for students of the Classics, but open to the public, on Wednesday and Friday afternoons at 3.30, in Sever 18, beginning on Friday, February 14. The subjects of the lectures will be:

Feb. 14.--Introduction -- The Middle Ages.

Feb. 19.--The Revival of Learning in the Fifteenth Century.

Feb. 21.--The French Period, Sixteenth Century.

Feb. 26.--The Older Dutch School, Seventeenth Century.

Feb. 28.--The English and the Later Dutch Schools, Eighteenth Century.

Mar. 5.--The German Period, Nineteenth Century.

Mar. 7.--Nineteenth Century, concluded.

The remaining lectures will treat of the history of Studies in Language, Literature, Philosophy and Science, History and Geography, Archaeology, Mythology and Religion, and Antiquities. The several topics will be announced each week in the Calendar

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