—Andrew Carnegie offers to reimburse all Cornell students for any pecuniary loss incurred during the recent scourge of typhoid fever. —Princeton University graduates its 156th class this year. Mr. Frank Smith, of Fricks, Pa., acts as Latin salutatorian, and Mr. Corwin Howell, of Newark, as valedictorian. —The improvenient of the 1,900 acres of woodland reservation about West Point has been undertaken by the i 6 Seniors in the Forestry Department of Yale. The satisfactory completion of this work entitles them to their bachelor's degree. —lncendiaries have been at work lately trying to destroy .upper class Club Houses at Princeton. —By the will of Rebecca C. Ames Harvard receives $50,000, the income of which is to support poor students. —Bryn Mawr Alumni Association have collected over $125,000 for the new $250,000 librar}•. The main reading room will be decorated and dedicated to those faithful graduates. —The Department of Experimental Psychology at Yale will soon begin the study of native Indian dialects. The Carnegie In stitute at Washington have furnished funds for the expedition. A special car will be sent out in charge of the Yale men. They will gramophone records of the rapidly disappearing dialects. —Prof. Chas. L. Griffin, clean of the College of Applied Sciences at Syracuse University, has resigned. He was formerly with Pennsylvania State College. —Andrew Carnegie has given $600,000 toward the endowment fund of the Tuskegee Normal and Industrial Institute. Mr. Car- COLLEGE ORBIT. 0. C. HAYS