—Dr. G. B. Shivery, a former student of this college, and a graduate of the Eclectic Medical College of Cincinnati, is gaining an extensive practice at Fishertown, Bedford county, Pa. ’87 —W. F. White will represent the Keystone Chapter of the Q. T. V. fraternity as a delegate to the Annual Convention held at Amherst, Mass., June 18th. He left the College last Wednesday morning, and will return immediately upon the close of the convention to participate in the Commencement exercises. COLLEGE ORBIT. Cornell University will confer no more honorary degrees. Hon. T. S. Sabin lately died, leaving by will $50,000 to Wabash College. The late W. C. DePauw left over a million dollars to DePauw University. Ann Arbor University has received from the state $1,000,000 during the last thirty years. The classes of '42 and ’43 of Yale College played the first foot-ball game in this country. The University of Pennsylvania has adopted the English custom of wearing caps and gowns. Out of every one hundred Freshmen who enter at Yale, seventy-five graduate, at Harvard seventy-four. In point of attendance the University of Michigan is second among American institutions. It has 1,535 students at present. Cornell has organized its Law Department with Hon. Douglas Boardmann as Dean. Stu dents will be received for the collegiate year be ginning Sep. 23, 1887. A $4OOO scholarship has been given to Dart mouth College on condition that no student who uses tobacco shall receive any benefit from such scholarship. Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Columbia make up the Inter-collegiate Base-Ball League. There is another inter-collegiate league composed of Amherst, Brown, Dartmouth and Williams. The Catholic University of America has lately been incorporated in Washington. The university is established “to teach philosophy, theology, natural science, mathematics, history, belles-lettres, ancient and modern languages, law, and medicine.” THE FREE LANCE. Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va , is an in dustrial and technical school in which there are 450 colored boys and girls with 131 Indians of both sexes working hand in hand. $46,732.21 were paid out last year in wages. Dr. McCosh’s suggestion made some time since, that Princeton College be transformed into a university, has been approved by the Board of Trustees, and steps will be taken at once in the direction of the change. The corporators of the new Clark Universi ty to be established in Worcester. Mass., have organized and elected Mr. Clark president. _ Mr. Clark submitted a statement from which it ap pears that he intends to give $2,000,000 to the institution. Johns Hopkins died leaving over $3,000,000 to found the university which bears his name, asking that the site of the institution should be his large estate at Clifton. His wishes in regard to this were not complied with, and a lady now offers to give permanently $35,000 annually to sustain a scientific school in connection with the university providing the wishes of her father, who was a friend of Mr. Hopkins, be regarded in the situation of the institution. The second annual contests of the State In tel collegiate Athletic Association were held at the athletic grounds of the University of Penn sylvania on May 21. The result of the contest was Univ. Penna., first; Swarthmore, second; Lafayette, third; Lehigh, fourth; Dickinson, fifth. The most notable events of the occasion were Page’s running high jump, clearing 6 ft. Thibault’s 100 yards dash, time, seconds, and Faries’ one-mile run, time, 4 min utes and seconds. We take pleasure in acknowledging the Historical Journal , published at Williamsport, the Dickinson Liberal to which we send greeting, and the Indicator, on whose staff we recognize the name of one of P. S. C.’s alumni. The exchange between ourselves and the University Mirror is another pleasant relation es tablished between our college and the university which seems not far from us. The Mirror upon the whole bears a high standard. We should say that its magazine qualities are its strong points and its news department its weak point. A journal which we desire to notice is the Delaware College Review. In general character it is fully up to the average. Its editorial and EXCHANGE.