The De Pauw contest has been compromised, The University will receive over a million of dollars. In a prize debate at Princeton, in which all the classes were represented, a freshman won the prize. The faculty at Yale are attempting to put a stop to cane rushes by bribing the Freshman with a holiday. Yale h is considering the subject of sending their boat crew to England to row with Oxford and Cambridge. One of the editors ofthe Dariniouth has in , process of immediate publication a volume of his college poems. Ex-President White, of Cornell, has been chosen to succeed Dr. Asa Gray as regent the Smithsonian Institute. The Renssellaer Polytechnic Institute at Troy, N. Y„ was founded in 3824 and has 755 graduates living. The right to publish the programme of the Intercollegiate athletic association was sold to a New York firm for $525, The yearly boat race between Cambridge and Oxford took place on March 24th, Cam. bridge won by five lengths, By an act of the Virginia Legislature a nor mal,' school is to be established which will sup plant William and Mary college, Before the war 17 per cent of Harvard . men came from the south, now only:3 per cent come from the same section of country. It is reported that the Harvard alumni are circulating a petition asking the Faculty to allow the nine to play with professional teams. Three hundred thousand dollars has been subscribed for the building of a Christian Univer sity at Nankin, China, by some unknown Amer ican. The Sophomores•at the U. of P. threaten to break up the commencement of the Medics next May, unless the bowl which was captured at the last bowl fight be returned. The. senior class at Cornell intends to give the University Athletic Association a cinder track instead of the usual class meniorial. The ground will be given by the University. THE FREE LANCE. Co-education has been abolished at Adel• Bert College, The fifteen young ladies now in attendance will be• allowed to finish their course, but no more girls will be received, There are 2,619 female graduates from American colleges ; 998 are married; 948 teach school. Of the remainder, 133 earn wages at various occupations and professions, while 529 earn no wages at all. The, Institutes of Technology will establish during the corning summer a school either in the coal regions of Pennsylvania or in the iron re pions of Michigan, in order to give the students of the mining departments practice in the work of the mines, The class of 'BB will be the largest class that ever graduated from Cornell and the class of '9l is the largest that ever entered. The former numbers tit and the latter 350. Ten foreign countries are represented and almost every state in the union. just ten per cent are ladies. Nearly all the German Universities have large endowments, and yet the State budget each year gives them large sums of money. The university of Leipsig for instance, is more than five hundred years old and owns much real estate in the city. The Saxon Government, however, gives it every year about $400,000. --We wish to compliment the Dickinson/an on its new cover. It presents quite a neat and attractive appearance. Ow• plain clad paper has to do without a new Easter bonnet this spring. —We are in receipt of the Bales Student. This is the first time it has come to us, and we en joy it greatly. It has good sound editorials and an excellent local department. We hope it will come often. --Here are "those ladies" again with their Fharetra. We clip the following from an editor ial on the College Girl : "The college girl is a hard worker. We do not believe that the "men," as they call themselves at boy's colleges, study half so hard as she does, or learn half so much. They cannot do so if they cloud their brains with cigarette smoke." Quite sarcastic, isn't it ? Ciowelilan for March contained two excellent articles entitled, Why am I a Republi can ? and, Why am I a Democrat ? We think the latter shows a little more partisanship than EXCHANGE