record aji in. Harder cleared 5 ft 5 in and thereby won a "team cap." The points scored on the '92 Cup were : '94- 15, '95-6, '96-34, '97-33• Taken all in all the performances were very creditable. J. J. Con nelly '97, made the best record, winning 22 points. J. B. White '94, stood second with 25, winning every event he entered. New material showed up quite well, although there were some disappointments. From the character of the work done, the outlook is encouraging for a good, strong team in the Spring ; but nothing will be accomplished without prictice, and we wish to impress this on the minds of the students. PERSONALS. Ex-'96. E. D. Bricker is United Press Associa tion correspondent at Chambersburg, Pa. Ex-'96, R. E. Tyson, who left college recently, on account of poor health will return next year and enter '97. • Ex-'96. L. L. Johnson is•engaged in the whole sale tea and coffee business on Market St. Phila delphia. Ex-'94. M. Elliot has been advanced to the po sition of general manager of the electroplating works at Philadelphia. Ex-'93. Miss Grace Ling will graduate next June from the medical course at the University of Michigan. Ex-'93. "Fish" Motz visited his Alma Mater recently. 90. Philip G. Gossler who is with the United States Illuminating and Power Co. visited his friends at the college recently. '93. S. H. Brown has been making an extended tour of the South. '9O. Dr, W. H. Walker has tendered his resig nation to take effect at the end of this year. He has had, unsolicited, a very flattering offer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as in THE FREE LANCE structor; but he is_undecided about accepting. The College loses a warm friend and a good iii• structor '9O. J. C. Mock stopped at the College for a few days on his*way back from his home to his work. He is at present Asst. Constructing Engi neer of the Union Switch and Signal Co. Prof. Emery has tendered his resignation to take effect at the close of this College year. He goes to accept a better position at his Alma Mater, Dartmouth. We are sorry to lose him but wish him success in his new field of activity. Prof. L. H. Barnard who resigned the profes- sorship of Civil Engineering last year to settle in England, has returned to this country and is studying medicine in Philadelphia. Cornell has 512 free scholarships which aggre gate slso,ooo.—Ex. It is said that Franklin and Marshall college will soon open its doors to the gentler sex. A hand-ball tournament for the championship of the university will shortly take place at Cor nell. Yale has a Hawaiian club, numbering about a dozen members, most of them residents of Hono lulu. An American girl is the first woman to take the degree of Doctor of Mathematical Science at the Sorbonne, Paris. At the meeting of the inter-collegiate athletic association on March 4, the place for holding the annual Spring games will be the chief objects of discussion. The University of Paris has over 7,000 students and in this, as well as other universities of France, there are no classes, no athletics, no commence ment day, no college periodicals, no glee clubs and no fraternities. COLLEGE ORBIT.