Monday, March 14.
PRESIDENT AND FELLOWS OF HARVARD COLLEGE. Meeting at No. 50 State street. Boston, 10.30 A. M.
**THE ADMINISTRATION OF LAW BY PUBLIC OFFICERS. II. The Powers of the Administration. Professor B. Wyman. East Lecture Room, Austin Hall, 12 M.
SEMINARY OF ECONOMICS. The Elizabethan Patents of Monopoly. Mr. W. H. Price. University 23, 4.30 P. M.
**PHYSICAL COLLOQUIUM. Some Experiments on Resonance in Wireless Telegraph Circuits. Dr. G. W. Pierce. Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Room 25, 4.45 P. M.
*LECTURE. L'Aristocratie Italienne. Count Angelo de Gubernatis. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 P. M.
*LECTURES ON ANCIENT GREEK UNIVERSITY LIFE. IV. The Professors (continued): their Instruction and Public Displays. Dr. John W. H. Walden. Harvard 1, 4.30 P. M.
Tuesday, March 15.
FACULTY OF ARTS AND SCIENCES. Meeting at University 5, 4 P. M.
LAST DAY for receiving applications for all Graduate Fellowships and Scholarships, and for College Scholarships to be assigned to Graduate Students.
**GEOLOGICAL CONFERENCE. Cambrian Slates at Braintree. Mr. W. S. Tower. Geology of the Deserts of Southern Nevada. Professor Jaggar. Geological Museum, 8 P. M.
Wednesday, March 16.
BOARD OF OVERSEERS. Special Meeting at No. 50 State street, Boston, 11 A. M.
MATHEMATICAL CONFERENCE. The Use of Laboratory Methods in Teaching Mathematics. Mr. G. D. Birkhoff. Sever 24, 4.30 P. M.
**ZOOLOGICAL CLUB. Sea Bottom Deposits of the Bermuda and Challenger Banks. Mr. H. B. Bigelow. Short Papers. Room 1, fourth floor, Museum of Comparative Zoology, 4.45 P. M.
*LECTURE. La Bourgeoise Italienne. Count Angelo de Gubernatis. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 P. M.
**READING. The Book of Ruth, the twelfth chapter of the Book of Ecclesiastes, the Story of the Shunammite, and the Song of Miriam,--in the King James Version. Mr. Copeland. Sever 11, 8 P. M.
Thursday, March 17.
*VESPER SERVICE. Appleton Chapel, 5 P. M. The front seats are reserved for students and for officers of the University and their families till 4.55 P. M.
**UNIVERSITY DEBATING CLUB. Debate. Training Table Room of Union, 7.30 P.M. Question: "Resolved, That the interests of the nations of the world would be best subserved by a strict maintenance of the integrity of China." Principal Disputants.--Affirmative: F. H. Stinchfield 2L., W. D. Rankin '05; negative: J. Lebowich 1L., W. H. Davis '05; critic, A. J. Barron, Princeton '02.
*PHILOSOPHICAL CLUB. The Influence of Idealistic Philosophy on Religious Teaching. Professor E. C. Moore. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 P. M.
Friday, March 18.
*DIVINITY SCHOOL. Devotional Service with Sermon. Mr. E. S. Meredith. Divinity Chapel, 7.30 P. M.
**EDUCATIONAL CONFERENCE. Educational Development in the Hawaiian Islands. Mr. S. P. French, of Honolulu. Phillips Brooks House, 7.30 P. M.
*POLITICAL CLUB. Reform in a Large City Department, with Special Reference to the New York Police Department. Mr. Gherardi Davis, recently Assistant Police Commissioner in New York City. Lecture Room of the Fogg Museum, 8 P. M
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Geological Trip During April Recess.