for thirty-five years. He received an embossed tablet with the names of 10,000 Harvard men attached. At a mass meeting of the college men a $5,000 portrait of President and Mrs. Eliot was given to the University. —ln Germany one person out of every 213 attends college; in Scotland, one in every 520; in United States, one in every 2,000, and in England, one in every 5,000. —For some time Harvard authorities have been considering the discontinuance of foot ball as a university sport. They give as their reason the bitter feeling which is manifest among the man agers, players and substitutes. There seems to be so little of true college spirit and so much of selfishness and jealousy shown in the whole affair. —Casper Whitney, the well known writer on American sports, in a recent article in the Outing, places “State” thirteenth on the list of American Colleges in respect to foot ball. His ranking is based on the style of playing, the comparison of scores and the conditions under which most important games are played. —The students of Columbia presented their annual opera at the Carnegie Lyceum. The entire opera, “The Isle of Illusia,” was composed by a ’Ol graduate. —Penn University campus contains sixty acres. At present fifty buildings are occupied. —There are 2,572 students in attendance at the university, and 114 of this number are foreigners. —One hundred students of Yale Scientific School will attend St. Louis Fair in a body. They will travel and conduct them selves as a military body. Capt. A. S. Smoke, their instructor in tactics, will be in command., ' —Carnegie gives Mount Holyoke College $50,000 for a new