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Fact and Rumor.

There will be no recitation in Fine Arts 3 today.

It is reported that there will be a cut in German 1a on Monday.

In French 2 there will be no theme on Taine before the vacation.

It is reported that there will be a cut Monday in Philosophy I.

The list of outside reading in French 1a was given out yesterday.

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It is said that there will be an hour examination in Chemistry 5 on Monday.

In German 1a "Ein Kopf" must be read outside of the class before the mid-years.

A valuable set of mathematical apparatus was recently presented to Yale.

There are 119 elective courses open to academic juniors and seniors at Yale.

A mass meeting at Princeton Tuesday voted to drop lacrosse from the University A. A.

The Rovers and Olympics will arrive here early this morning and will be shown about the college.

When completed the cups for the winning team in today's game will be exhibited at Thurston's.

French 2 has finished Taine's La Fontaine and will read George Sand's Nanon until the mid-years.

Professor A. B. Hart has an article in the December issue of the Political Science Quarterly upon Hermann von Holst.

J. H. Sears '89, who was once an editor of the CRIMSON, has gone to New York to assume an editorship on the Cosmopolitan.

The North American Review for December contains an artical on "The American Student," by Prof. Isaacs, of New York University.

According to their statements made September, thirty-five of the Exeter seniors intend to enter Harvard, and fifteen intend to enter Yale.

A new athletic organization, to be known as the United Exchange Athletic Club, is be organized among the members of all the different exchanges in New York.

It is announced that a new and greatly enlarged Manhattan College, capable of accommodating 1,000 students, and to cost when completed fully $1,000,000. is to be built at Irvington on the Hudson.

Goethe's "Egmont" must be read outside of class before the mid-years by members of German 4. "Ephigenie auf Tauris" will be real in class in the same time. The next theme, due on January 19th, is to be a comparison of the characters Egmont and Oranien in "Egmont."

The prizes at Princeton in the Senior Baird contest have been announced as follows: First Baird prize, Edward Wilson Aull, St. Louis, Mo.; for oratory, Hugh McNinch, Grovania, Pa.; for delivery, Phineas B. Kennedy, Bridgeton, N. J.; Disputation-first prize, Ambrose W. Vernon, Morristown, N. J.; second prize, James C. Meyers, Columbia, Pa; Poetry-prize, Edward W. Evans, Jr., Trenton, N. J.

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