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Fact and Rumor.

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

The Pi Eta theatricals will occur shortly.

The University of Michigan has nineteen Japanese students.

The football game to day between '88 and '89 will be called at 3 p. m.

Cornell supports sixteen Greek letter societies, three of which are composed entirely of ladies.- Ex.

It is said that Princeton has a college telegraph company which has stations in all the dormitories.

The faculty of Amherst have invited J. M. Ward, of the "New Yorks," to deliver a lecture on base-ball.- Ex.

There is a project on foot for lighting the Williams College buildings by electricity.

Dr. McGlynn and Henry George are soon to give lectures at Amherst College.

The second seven of the Signet are Baldwin, Cabot, Darling, Lee, Richards, Ropes, Wengren.

The Thesis on Spinoza in Philosophy 13 is due Dec. 7. The hour examination takes place to day.

The first statue of Long fellow erected in this country will be unveiled next spring in Portland, Me., the poet's birthplace. The figure is of bronze and was made in Italy by Franklin Summons.

Faculty meetings occur on the first and third Tuesdays in each month. The next one comes next Tuesday.

There was no lecture in F. A. 4 yesterday. Professor Norton will meet the class to-morrow at the regular hour.

Professor Goodwin will give the first two lectures on Plato, Socrates and the Sophists this afternoon at 3 o'clock in Sever 11.

W. H. Thayer. '89, has resigned the secretaryship of the DAILY CRIMSON and H. O. Poor, '90 has been elected to fill his place.

Dr. McCosh, according to an exchange, has found a marked rise in the morals of Princeton since the abolition of fraternities there.

A number of petitions for changes of electives which have been granted, remain in the hands of the secretary. They will not take effect until countersigned by the instructors whose classes are to be joined.

The ticket agent in the Grand Central station in New York is said to have remarked in reply to the return trip that the company seriously thought of raising the rates in view of the fact that Harvard had been defeated.

G. H. Papazian, of Constantinople, a special student in the University, has brought from his Eastern home some very beautiful articles as samples of oriental manual industry, which he is showing to students only at his room, 4 Divinity Avenue.

Mr. J. S. White, Harvard, '70, and Mr. Walter Camp, Yale, '80, advocate a number of important changes in football rules. Chief among these is a proposition to have the second half of the game start with the teams in the same relative positions as those in which they were at the close of the first half.

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