—At New York, John M. Ward, of Bellefonte, to Miss Helen Dauvray, of New York. The newly-married couple rank high in their profes sions, one as a base ball player, the other as an actress. —Wat. L. Barclay, ’Bg, will leave college at the close of the term and go into the lumber bus iness with his father at Sinnemahoning, Pa. Bar clay takes a great interest in athletic sports, and will be greatly missed by his many friends at the college. . ’76-Benjamin F. Keller was married to Miss Mercy J. Baldy, Thursday, Oct. 25, at Christ Memorial Church, Danville, Pa. Mr. Keller is at present a clerk in the Interior Department of very high standing, but expects to commence the practice of law soon. On his wedding tour he visited friends in Bellefonte, Pa. COLLEGE ORBIT. Cornell no longer gives honors at gradua- The University of Pennsylvania has a class of twenty in Assyrian. Andrew Carnegie is a trustee of the Penn sylvania State College, Columbia College possesses a copy of Shake speare valued at $3,000. 242 different courses are afforded to the stu dents of Michigan University. Cornell is said to have a capital of #6,000,- 000, which is rapidly increasing. The Boston Institute of Technology receives #lOO,OOO per year from the State. Columbia has more students in all her de partments than any other college in the United States. The University of Pennsylvania has #50,000 to build a classic theatre and #lO,OOO to build a library. #53,300 is given annually by Harvard to needy students seeking an education at the Uni versity. Prof. Schaeffer, Dean of Cornell University, has accepted the presidency of the lowa State University. The annual expenses of the Freshmen at Yale for lacrosse, foot-ball, and boating are said to be #43,000. The Juniors of Cornell encourage athletics THE FREE LANCE. by giving annually a reward of #5O to the best athlete in the class. The United States has 59,594 college and university students in 364 colleges and universi ties, with 4,160 instructors, At Baliol College the students may substitute German for Greek. This action has been taken by Dr. Jewett, perhaps the foremost Greek schol ar of the age. Wellesley College opened this year with 615 students. Miss Rose Cleveland is mentioned as a probable successor to the retiring president, Miss Alice Freeman. Yale is to have a new recitation hall; and Harvard is to have a new hall costing #200,000 to be built by the Hastings family, which has long been represented in the University. John M. Ward (“Monte” Ward) has been invited to deliver a lecture at Amherst on base ball. Mr. Ward learned to play ball at the Penn sylvania State College. Cornell is making a noble effort to obtain a fine Y, M. C. A. building, but the students should not reflect discredit upon themselves and the As-- sociation in class matters after the manner of pol iticians. Columbia College will soon adopt a new marking system exempting men of high standing from examinations, and in Illinois College a stu dent who gets a grade of 85 per cent, is excused from examinations. Johns Hopkins University held seventeen thousand shares of Baltimore & Ohio stock, which yielded an income of #136,000 annually. Recently, however, the stock of this company de preciated in value so that the income is somewhat curtailed. Detectives on the part of the state are hunt ing down the students of Williams who were en gaged in the late obnoxious hazing, and the col lege authorities have forbidden rushes under pen alty of debarring a representation in the base ball league. The Dickinson College foot-ball team, after suffering successsve defeats, was unable to meet the guarantee of #4O for a game at Carlisle with the Pennsylvania State College team. The latter team afterward offered Dickinson a guarantee of #5O and local expenses, but they refused. At Harvard, work on college papers is allow ed as substitute for regular literary exercises.— Ex. Good plan. We would like to see it tried here.— •Dickinsonian. Ditto University of Wis-