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Crimson Calendar

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

All notices for the weekly CRIMSON Calendar must be placed in the notice box in the CRIMSON Office on Friday before 5 o'clock, marked "For the CRIMSON Calendar."

Monday, February 28.

10.30.--President and Fellows of Harvard College. Meeting at 50 State street, Boston.

2.00.--Board of Overseers. Meeting at University Hall.

5.00.--Physical Colloquium. "Bjerrum's Hypothesis regarding Absorption Bands in Gases." Mr. J. B. Brinsmade. Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Room 25.

7.30.--Monthly candidates, literary and business, called out.

Tuesday, February 29.

2.30.--Lecture (in French). "The Present State of the Problem of Evolution." II. "Comparative Anatomy in Support of Evolution." Professor Caullery, of the University of Paris. Nash Lecture Room, University Museum.

7.00.--Advocate candidates, literary and business called out.

7.15.--Professor E. C. Moore on "West and East. The Expansion of Christendom and the Naturalization of Christianity in the Orient," Emerson A.

8.15.--1919 Smoker, in Union.

8.15.--Organ Recital. Dr. A. T. Davison. Appleton Chapel.

Wednesday, March 1.

Last day for receiving applications for Fellowships and Scholarships, for 1916-17, in Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

Last day for receiving from persons intending to enter College applications for Price Greenleaf aid, James H. Rumrill Scholarships, and Charles Elliott Perkins Scholarships, for 1916-17.

4.00.--Conference of Municipal Government. "The Taxation of Urban Street Railways." Mr. J. W. Bell Widener N.

4.45.--Chemical Colloquium. "Determination of the Specific Heat of Gases and of Chemical Equilibrium between Gases by Means of Explosions." Mr. Otto Maass. Coolidge Memorial Laboratory.

7.00.--Sophomore dinner in the Union.

8.00.--Swimming team vs. Andover.

8.00.--Musical Clubs concert in Fitchburg.

8.00.--Medical Lecture. "The Diseases of the Nose, Ear and Throat and the Prevention of Colds." Dr. George F. Tobey, in the Union.

8.00.--Harvard Mathematical Club. "Integrals and Double Series." Mr. R. W. Brink. Common Room, Conant Hall.

8.15.--Concert for the Benefit of the Belgian Relief Fund. (Under the auspices of the Division of Music.) Mile Octavia Belloy, Mlle, Daisy Jean, Mlle, Gabrielle Radoux, Mr. Willis Flanagan, and Mr. Jan Collignon. John Knowles Paine Concert Hall.

9.00.--Reading by Professor Copeland in the Union.

Thursday, March 2.

2.30.--Lectures (in French). "The Present State of the Problem of Evolution." III. "Comparative Anatomy in Support of Evolution. Adaptation." Professor Caullery. Nash Lecture Room, University Museum.

4.45.--Vesper Service. Musical program, under the direction of Dr. A. T. Davison '06. Brief address by the Reverend George A. Gordon, Minister of the Old South Church, Boston. Appleton Chapel.

4.45.--Physiological Colloquium. "Theoretical Aspects of the Action of Rays on Protoplasm." Dr. W. T. Rovie Nash Lecture Room, Botanical Museum.

Friday, March 3.

4.30.--Harvard Officers Fund Association Annual meeting. University 5.

4.30.--Lecture on "Teleology and Natural Science." III. "Teleology in Modern Biology." Professor Henderson. Emerson F.

5.00.--Faculty of Medicine. Meeting at the Medical School, Boston.

4.55.--Harvard Zoological Club. "Geotropism in Planarians." Mr. J. M. D. Olmsted. "The Rearing of Lobsters." Mr. A. B. Dawson. Zoological Laboratory, Room 46.

7.30.--Physical Conference. "Selected Topics in Sound." II. Professor Sabine. Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Room 3.

8.00.--Gymnasium meet with Dartmouth and M. I. T.

Saturday, March 4.

Last day in the second half-year upon which Undergraduates, Special Students, Unclassified Students, and Out-of-Course Students in University may drop, without liability for additional charge, courses of study that begin in the second half-year.

8.00.--Intercollegiate Glee Club Contest in New York.

8.00.--I. C. A. A. A. A. Indoor Games in New York.

8.00.--New England Intercollegiate Wrestling Meet at Hemenway Gymnasium.

8.00.--Swimming team vs. Yale at Cambridge Y. M. C. A

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