188 The University Courier. LOGALS. Professor and Mrs. Sayre entertained Monday evening. The Chancellor's residence will be ready for occupancy about Christmas. Miss Mary Stone is wearing the black and gold of Kappa Alpha Theta. A number of ladies and gentlemen enjoyed the hospitality of the Sigma Chis last Friday night. A number of the students were entertained at the home of Rev. Dr. Ayres last Tuesday night. The senior pharmics took their final examination in Crystallography and Minerology last Friday. Rev. Dr. Ayers is leading Chapel this week. This is an item of news to a majority of the students. Professor Dunlap has purchased the property on the northwest corner of Berkley and Kentucky. Professor Sayre keeps open house for the members of the School of Pharmacy every Friday night. The Glee and Banjo Clubs are practicing twice a week, and are fast reaching a high state of proficiency. Professor Miller will deliver a lecture before the Y. W. C. A. this afternoon on the Astronomy of the Bible. Chapel exercises are from 8:40 to 9 o'clock in the morning. Perhaps some of the students do not know this. The library of the Law School has just received a valuable addition of sixty volumes, at a cost of $250. Garfield University at Wichita will close on the 18th of this month, and will not resume again this winter. A number of the Garfield students will enter K. S. U., and have written to Chancellor Snow asking if their grades will be received here. Rev. Clark, of Ottawa, led Chapel Monday morning. Five boxes of chemicals and apparatus which were ordered from Germany last June,were received by the Pharmacy Department this week. The Glee and Banjo Clubs had their pictures taken last Saturday afternoon at Willis'. Three groups were taken, one of each club separately and one of both clubs together. On Monday, the Natural History Department received from the western part of the state a specimen supposed to be a fragment of a genuine meteor. The matter will be investigated. The Natural History Department has just received as an addition to its present large collection, of a large golden eagle which measures seven feet and four inches from tip to tip of its wings. This week Chancellor Snow expects to be gone three nights delivering lectures. Wednesday night he will lecture in Augusta, in Butler County; Thursday night at Americus, and Friday night at Great Bend. P. J. Williamson, a brother of our "Willie" and a former student of the University, was elected county surveyor of Wyandotte County at the recent election. His opponent was Robert McAlpen, also a former student. At the Historical Seminary last Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock Prof. A. S. Olin occupied the entire hour in reading an excellent paper on "The Principles of Early Taxation." The paper was one he prepared and read before the professors and students of the Agricultural College at Manhattan a few weeks ago. Fred Diggs sailed last Thursday from New Orleans for Guatemala, Central America, where he has gone to accept a position as overseer on a large coffee plantation. Fred is a graduate of the pharmacy class of '92, and was taking post graduate work in the University when he left to accept a position in the Kansas building at the World's fair. His many friends will be pleased to hear of his success.