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Fact and Rumor.

E. D. Marsh, '85, is now in Cambridge.

Lehigh claims the finest laboratory in the country.

The boating debt of Columbia '87 amounts to about $700.

The seniors at Williams have voted to graduate in cap and gown.

The Advocate comes out to day. This is the last number by the '85 board.

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W. S. Thayer, '85, has returned to Cambridge to take his examinations.

Dr. A. P. Peabody will conduct prayers during the month of February.

The valuation of the Cornell library is placed at $75,000 by a New York expert.

Mr. Penrose, '84, a member of the '84 class crew, is now a candidate for the University crew.

Prof. N. S. Shaler has been appointed one of the board of U. S. Mint Commissioners.

Specimens and drawings in N. H. 5 are due on Saturday at 2 P. M. in the Zoological Museum.

One might think by the illustrations in the last Spectator that "cubbing" was in order at Columbia.

The paper in German III. yesterday was very long. especially since everything had to be written in German.At Williams the cry is for light in the gymnasium in the evening, instead of for light in the library, as is the case here.

The length of the examination paper in Latin I. yesterday was such that not a single man left the room before one o'clock.

On the suspension of the Princeton Review the Norristown Herald remarks : "We have the Census reports of 1880 left."

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