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Fact and Rumor.

Professor Davis will not meet the class in N. H. I until Monday, Dec. 5.

The second hour examination in Philosophy 13 occurs to-day.

Examination schedules have already appeared at Princeton.

Members of Philosophy 2 are reminded that they must bring blue books to the hour examination to-day.

Photographs of the Yale eleven in several groupings will soon appear in Harper's Weekly.

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The foot-ball game between '90 and '91 is indeflnitely postponed on account on the cold and the frozen ground.

But four candidates for the Yale 'varsity crew presented themselves at the boat-house the other day.

Saturday night, in a Providence theatre, there will be produced a burlesque on the Harvard-Yale foot-ball game.

Yesterday afternoon, many men took advantage of the fine skating on Glacialis.

The Princeton second eleven on its short trip defeated the Johns Hopkins eleven by a score of 16 to 0 and the naval academy at Annapolis 22 to 5.

Work for the base-ball cage at Princeton has been commenced. It is to be of wood with windows in the top and will be 150 feet long and 60 feet wide.

Mr. Bradlee, the independent candidate for mayor of Boston, has with-drawn in favor of the republican nominee, and the contest now lies between the present Mayor O'Brien and Alderman Hart.

Nearly one hundred and ten have signed for the senior dinner this evening at the Parker House.

The Glee Club and Pierian Sodality will give a concert in Sanders' Theatre, Dec. 16.

At a recent meeting of the Conference Francaise, C. Hunneman, '89, was elected vice-president and M. B. Clark, '88, treasurer.

The Burgess fund now amounts to $9,700. General Paine will present the testimonial to Mr. Burgess some time next week.

The following men from '89 were elected, at its last meeting, to the Finance Club: C. A. Bunker, H. H. Darling, W. C. Green, P. J. Hall, J. M. Newell, W. F. Pillsbury, C. A. Wait, G. E. Wright.

Wm. Belden Noble, '85, a former editor of the CRIMSON, was married in Washington yesterday to Miss Tulee, of Alabama. Mr. Noble will enter Oxford, and study for the Episcopal ministry.

Mr. E. B. Stewart, '87, the mainstay of the Lampoon, two years ago, has recovered from his recent severe illness, and will spend the next two years in this country. He was in Cambridge yesterday.

The vesper service yesterday afternoon was largely attended, and it was very gratifying to see the great number of college men present. The tenor solo was very well sung, but the support of the boy choir was not all that could be desired.

The following is clipped from the New York letter in the last Amherst Student and is worthy of note: "I think the Harvard team as a whole is as strong, if not stronger than Yale, and if she had been allowed a touchdown in the first half, as she ought to have been, Yale would have been defeated."

When we come to the Harvard Monthly it makes us envious to see one article in each issue signed by some noted name, and we feel like amending the clause in our constitution which limits our contributions to undergraduates. Yet on mature thought we doubt if this would be advantageous. We believe a college publication should be distinctly an exponent of work done by the students of that institution.- Williams Literary Monthly.

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