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Fact and Rumor.

The sophomore crew rowed on the river yesterday.

"The Winter's Tale" will be the next play read in English 2.

F. McDonald, '92, has been elected secretary of the Southern Club.

The medals won by Harvard men at the Yale-Second Regiment games have been received.

Professor Sanderson desires it announced that "Eugenie Grandet" will be read in French 2 today.

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Work on the track was begun last Tuesday, and it will be put in condition as soon as the weather permits.

The annual meeting of the Free Wool Club will be held this evening. Officers for the coming year will be elected and the annual reports read.

The football squad is being held closely to work. The roll is called every afternoon in the gymnasium and a careful record kept of absent men.

Professor Hart will be in the closed alcove of the library Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, at Mr. Williams' consultation hours.

All men who wish to subscribe to the Delphi Fund but who may not have been approached as yet, are earnestly requested to send subscriptions to any member of the Delphi committees given in the CRIMSON of March 12.

The eighth annual dinner of the New York Alumni Association of Phillips Exeter Academy will be held at the Hoffman house tonight.

A large number of men have entered for the 10-yard dash in the Saturday Winter Meeting. No spiked shoes will be used.

The new shell for the freshman crew which has arrived is much similar to those of previous years. It is about sixty feet long and was built at Troy N. Y., by Waters.

The address which was delivered by Mr. William Lloyd Garrison, before the Free Wool Club last fall has been printed, and copies have been sent to the members of the club.

It is hoped that the freshman crew will be able to go to the training table April 7; but unless the class gives some more substantial evidence of its intention to support the crew than it has up to this time, the management will be unable to send the men to the table at that date.

The number of candidates for the Yale freshman nine has been reduced to twenty-eight. The men are coached daily by McClintock, '90. The following games have been definitely arranged; April 12, West Havens, May 3, Amherst freshman, at Amherst; April 16, Waterbury, at New Haven; May 30, Andover, at Andover; May 31, Exeter, at Exeter.

Selections from some of the following books must be read this month in History 1: Lewis "History of Germany," Seebohm's "Protestant Revolution," Trench's "Lectures on Gustavus Adolphus," Ward's "House of Austria," Gardiner's "Thirty Years' War." All these books are reserved in the library.

Five members of the Harvard Chess and Whist Club visited the Boston Chess Club last evening and played simultaneous games with Mr. Cummings. M. C. Nichols, '92, was the first to be defeated. R. D. Brown, '90, and S. Adams, '93, then won games from Mr. Cummings, but H. A. Davis, '91, lost the next game. The final one was the longest and most closely contested and was won by F. W. Nicolls, '92.

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