played her team twice, once with the Preps and once against the first team. It is true the Sophs had players on the first and second teams, but the Freshman had the same number, besides having team work, Two of, 93's best players should have remained off the field, but did play. As it was, the Freshman won the game by a trick, and not by superior strength. Jus=E. PERSONALS. '94. E. G. Edwards has left college but expects to return in the spring. '94., G. E. Stevens has left college and will en ter Lehigh next fall. '93. W. R. Motz has left college and is engag ed with his father in the lumber business at Woodward, Pa. Ex-'93. Charles A. Cummings has accepted a position with the Missouri Lumber & Mining Company, Grandin, Mo. Ex-'gr. J. J. Patterson, Jr., is studying law at the U. P. Ex-'9i. J. Harvey White is in an electrical en gineers office, No. 300 Broadway, New York. ,go. W. E. Moore is engaged at New Castle. 'go. R. L. Watts has published a very credit able bulletin on the work of his department in the Experiment Station of Knoxville, Tenn. 'B6. W. Ross Foster is practicing medicine with his brother at Crafton, Pa., near Pittsburg. 'B9. J. P. Jackson is superintending the erec- tion of a steam plant and Electric R. R. at Hamp ton, Va. J. Sheridan Weller, 'B9, and Gilbert A. Beav er, '9o, assisted in the State Department at Har risburg, previous to the turning over of that De partment to the incoming Administration. Dr. W. R. Hunter has been elected a member of the medical staff of the University Hospital, Philadelphia. THE FREE LANCE. known. • The University of the City of New York is making an attempt to raise $500,000 for the es tablishment of new scholarships and laboratories. There is expected to be a Yale Alumni Associa tion organized in Tokia, Japan. At present there are 5o old Yale men in that city. Attendance at chapel is no longer compulsory at Columbia, but students from all departments are invited to attend. The lady students of Cornell are working to endow a ward in the Ithaca Hospital, which shall be open to students of the Cornell University. A movement is on foot to hold an inter-collegi ate regatta on Lake George next summer to be open to all colleges except Harvard and Yale. It is reported that an English paper has started a foot-ball Insurance system. Foot ball players are insured against fatal accidents for the sum of zoo pounds. A penny insures this benefit in ad dition to buying the paper, 'BB. G. C. McKee is singing first tenor in the First Presbyterian church, Seattle, Washington. Ex-'B3. Daniel Ulrich has entered the service of the Lehigh Valley Rail Road Company, and has been appointed resident engineer at West Superior, Wisconsin. Three prominent members of the State Board of Agriculture; Mr. Ailman, Col. Young and Mr. Serril were the guests of Dr. Armsby over Sunday, January iBth. Prof. T. F. Hunt, class of 'B4 University of Illinois, has been elected to the chair in Agri cultural in our college and also Agricultural Chem ist at the State Experimental Station• Prof. Hunt has filled a similar position for the last three years for his Alma Mater. COLLEGE ORBIT. England has but one college paper, while on the Continent college journalism is practically un-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers