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This is the last issue of the CRIMSON for this term.
Seniors can get their theses in Political Economy 3 at the office.
About 8500 books have been added to the library during the past year.
Eighty-five has lost two members by death: Greenough Thayer, and William Anthony Woodside.
The Yale game will be called to-morrow at 3 o'clock. Reserved seat tickets are selling at one dollar premium. If the day is fair, fully 5000 people will witness the game.
The following members of '85 have been connected with the CRIMSON: Carpenter, Goodale, Hansen, Hobbs, Marquand, Noble, Norton, Parker, Paulding, Taylor, B. B. Thayer, Trask, Williams.
Lunch will be served to-day at Memorial at 12, and dinner at 5.30. The last regular meal at the hall will be dinner June 23rd. A breakfast will be served on the morning of the 24th on payment of an extra charge.
The base-ball contest stands as below:
Amherst plays Dartmouth to-day at Hanover, and Harvard plays Yale to-morrow at Cambridge. The Princeton-Amherst game which resulted in a tie, remains still to be played.
Eighty-five entered with 217 members, at the beginning of the sophomore year, this number had fallen to 207, it was decreased during that year to 195, and during the junior year, to 191.
Harvard's record in athletics for the past year stands as follows according to our published reports: foot-ball, 11 games, 7 victories; cricket, 9 games, 5 victories; lacrosse, 10 games, 8 victories; base-ball, 24 games, 23 victories In addition to this record, the Mott Haven cup was won by Harvard for the sixth successive year.
The Brass Band was photographed yesterday. A review of the work accomplished by this new college institution shows that it has furnished music during the past year for four torchlight processions, has given four yard concerts, and has played for the G. A. R. on Memorial Day, and at Somerville, at a war concert. The people of Cambridge and vicinity still live.
Eighty-five has been famous in it college, not so much for class work, as for the work of individual members. Storrow, Winslow, Atkinson and Williams, deserve especial mention for their efficient management of the various athletic organizations, and the success of Memorial Hall, and the Harvard Union is largely due to Baldwin, Halbert, and Sanford,
The Lampoon comes out to-day. It contains a double page cartoomon class day by F. H. Briggs. This is Mr. Briggs' farewell picture, and it is a very successful crowning of the artist's successful career on the Lampoon board. The last Lampoon will beissued on commencement day. Subscribers may have it forwarded, by leaving their name and address at Amee's, or with the editors.
The class day officers of '85 are: secretary, Walter Allen Halbert, of Binghampton, N. Y.; first marshal, John Eliot Thayer, of Boston; second marshal, James Jackson Storrow, Jr., of Boston; third marshal, Charles Heath Atkinson, of Brookline; orator, Edward Terry Sanford, of Knoxville, Tenn.; poet, George Read Nutter, of Boston; odist, Joseph Adna Hill, of Temple, N. H.; ivy orator, Ernest Lawrence Thayer, of Worcester; chorister, Clarence Walter Ayer, of Haverhill; class day committee, Samuel Ellsworth Winslow, of Worcester, John Joslin Colony, of Keene, Frederic Adrian Delano, of Newburg, N. Y.; class committee, William Henry Baldwin, Jr., of Boston, Otto Rheinhard Hansen, of Milwaukee, Benjamin Bowditch Thayer, of New York; photographic committee, McDonald Ellis White, of Boston, Marland Cogswell Hobbs, of Brookline, Arthur Gordon Webster, of Newton.
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