wire, which caused him to lose his balance and topple over on an uninsulated wire carrying a current at 2,300 volts pressure. He was kept alive for some hours by artificial respiration, but eventually the end came. Mr. Holloway was a very popular and much esteemed young man, and his quiet yet attractive ways as well as his ability in his line of work had made for him a long list of friends and hosts of admiring acquaintances. Never before in the history of the college has a graduate been called to his final rest so soon after leaving his classmates. Just ready for an aggressive successful life, with everything before him, his death brings great sorrow to all his friends and relatives. , —Dr. W. L. Bryan, President of Indiana University, has been elected president of the American Psychological Associa tion. —By the will of the late Mrs. Laura Courrier, of New York city, Yale University will ultimately receive $50,000 for the aid of poor students. —The electrical laboratory of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, at Troy, N. Y., has been almost completely de ‘stroyed by fire. The loss is estimated at over $30,000. —lt is announced that during the past two years an endow ment fund of more than $1,000,000 has been raised for Syra cuse University. —Kenyon K. Butterfield, instructor in Rural Sociology at the University of Michigan, has been appointed to the presidency of the Rhode Island State College of Agriculture, at Kingston. —lt is announced that the endowment fund for Schurtleff College, at Upper Alton, 111., has been completed, and that $92,000 has been collected to pay the debt of Albion College, COLLEGE ORBIT. JOS. H. PAINTER