The University Courier. 147 LOGALS. The present enrollment is 515. The Phi Psis will give a hop Friday evening in Fraternal Aid Hall. The class in quantitative analysis will commence next Thursday. Professor Templin will move into his new house northwest, of the city, the first of next week. Several classes dismissed Monday afternoon to allow the students to hear Jerry Simpson speak in the rink. The tables in the history and sociology room are covered with characters very similar to Egyptian hieroglyphics. A number of students attended the Lord Chesterfield party which was given last Friday evening in Fraternity Aid hall. The class in physical chemistry will begin work next Thursday at 12 o'clock. The work will consist of lectures by Professor Dains. About two hundred students skipped classes last Friday to give the foot-ball team a rousing "send off" on their departure for Denver. Tennis has revived again at Washburn college at Topeka. Tennis and marbles are the only athletic games attempted by Washburn students. Lawrence Journal. One of the Columbus papers has a State University column regularly filled with matter supplied from Columbus students here. The idea is good, let others adopt it. The building committee of the Board of Regents, consisting of Wm. Rogers of Barnes, C.R.Mitchell of Geuda Springs,and Gov. Charles Robinson of Lawrence, held a meeting last Saturday morning in the Chancellor's office. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Ayer very pleasantly entertained the young people of the Episcopal church at their home on Vermont street last Friday evening. The evening was passed in playing whist, after which elegant refreshments were served. The program for the Y. W. C. A. Convention will be published in the city papers. Sunday evening the prominent workers in the Young Women's Christian Associations in Kansas will speak at the Congregational Church. The grounds about the library building and the chancellor's residence will be terraced by an expert landscape artist. When finished they will be somewhat similar to the grounds of B. W. Woodward across the street. At a meeting of the Glee and Banjo Clubs last Wednesday night a constitution was adopted and a permanent organization formed. The following officers were elected: Frank House, President; Tom. Franklin, Secretary; Everette Greene, Treasurer. The October number of "The University Review" contains an article entitled "Kansas Foot Ball," by Professor E. M. Hopkins. The article, which is headed by a very good picture of the Professor, is an interesting history of foot ball in Kansas. The reception of the Woman's League of the University, which was to have been held next Saturday at the home of Mrs. Judge S.O. Thacher, has been postponed until a later date on account of the Y.W.C.A.convention which will be held on that day. The subject of discussion at the Historical Seminary last Friday afternoon was "The Religious Parliament and the Civic Church." Mr. Schaffer read a paper entitled "The Parliament of Religion at Chicago," which told of the history of its organization and movements, and the difficulty of bringing the different nations together. This was followed by a paper on "Religious Progress and Unity" by Miss Raddford, in which she compared the different religious beliefs of the world to Mt. Oread and the surrounding hills. "The Congress at Lucerne" was the title of a carefully prepared paper by Miss Edith Haskell, in which she set forth the workings and result of a congress at Lucerne, Switzerland, which was similar to the one held at Chicago. Professor Blackmar occupied the remainder of the hour in a discussion of the Civic Church.