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The examination in History I. yesterday was unusually hard.
Professor Packard, of Yale, is recovering from a serious illness in Athens.
The Yale crew will probably not go to a training table until after Easter.
There will be a one hour examination in Freshman Trigonometry Friday, Feb. 8.
Photographs of the Yale crew have been presented to each member of the Yale faculty.
It is rumored that several men have contracted pneumonia from taking examinations in Mass. 1 and 3.
Cornell freshmen wisely select some neighboring town for the place of their class supper.
"Alpine Roses," Professor Boyesen's new play has met with great success in New York.
Harvard will be represented by Mr. Williams, '85, at the lacrosse convention in New York, tonight.
The first work to be read in French 8, after the mid-years, will be About's "Le Roman d'un Brave Homme."
The examination in Greek 3 will consist of a short passage from the year's work, books xiii-xx, Odyssey, and eight passages from Homer.
Latin 2 will be examined on the year's work, Casar's "Civil War," and Livy, books I-II, with probably some sight work.
The alumni of the medical school of the College of the City of New York, held their annual reunion at Delmonico's, Thursday evening.
The following events will be contested at the Cornell winter athletic games: Standing high jump, running high jump, single vaulting, double vaulting, high kicking, boxing-heavy and light weights, wrestling-heavy and light weights, fencing, slow race-bicycles, fancy riding-bicycles, parallel bars, horizontal bars, rings, Indian clubs, potato race, mile walk, tug-of-war, climbing rope.
A bill has been presented in the United States Senate establishing a national university of medicine. The bill appropriates $100,000 to be expended in ground and buildings, and $1,000,000 to be placed at interest, the proceeds to meet the expenses of the university. The professors' chairs are to be opened to all medical schools, the great object of the institution being the general advancement of science.
The Columbia Veterinary College has, as we early predicted it would, closed its doors in the middle of a session. This institution began its career in 1880. It made quite a flourish, and soon succeeded in getting a respectable class in point of numbers; but if the facts were known its whole course would be shown to have been marked by continual discord. This feature has no doubt played a prominent part in bringing about its final collapse, which turned out of doors in the neighborhood of forty students who had paid their money for that which they will never get. This wrong has, however, been somewhat lessened by the American Veterinary College coming to the aid of the students. It magnanimously offered the junior class an asylum by exchanging matriculation tickets. This virtually places that class upon an equal footing with its own students. The senior class has not been so fortunate. We believe, however, an amicable and satisfactory arrangement will soon be made through which it will find its way out of its unfortunate position. [Ex.
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