THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE Students Journal Publishing Co KANSAS STATE UNIVERSITY. E. T. Hackney, Editor-in-Chief. R. L. Stewart, Local Editor BUSINESS MANAGERS. H.I. Maxwell. S. Olinger. ASSOCIATES. W. N. Logan, Exchanges. E. S. Riggs, Snow Hall. W. L. Gardner, Law. A. McMurray, Local. A. V. Schroder, Engineering E E. Cowman, Chemistry. Pauline Lewelling, Local. Anna Edwards. Library. Daisy Starr, Music Hall. Anna Edwards, Library. The stock of the STUDENT'S JOURNAL company consists of non-transferable one dollar shares. Any student, instructor or employee of the University may hold one and only one share. NOTICE- When this paragraph is marked it is to notify you that your subscription is due Please remit at once without further notice. LAWRENCE WORLD, LAWRENCE, KANSA VOL. III. MARCH 1, 1895. NO.23 II. W. LEVY, well known to many older students has been honored by election to the Presidency of the Adelphi, one of Ann Arbors strongest societies. The STUDENTS JOURNAL extends congratulations. THE young people of the churches of the city meet on Tuesday evening to consider the advisability of organizing "A Good Citizenship League." The object of this proposed League is the suppression of crime and vice in the city, and a general purification of the municipal government. We sincerely regret the action of the Missouri legislature, which will probably necessitate the closing of the State University at Columbia, Missouri, seemed to be in a fair way to redeem herself educationally. Therefore the announcement of the action of the legislature come in the nature of a clap of thunder out of a clear sky. Many members of this legislature will certainly live to see that in stabbing their university they stabbed, and that fatally, the influence and prosperity of their state. May Kansas be ever blessed with more broad minded and liberal legislators. THE STUDENTS JOURNAL Co. has again endorsed the plan it formulated some months since, and which has since received the endorsement of the faculty This plan is certainly broad and liberal enough and should meet with the united support of all the students. CANNOT some of the prosperous Alumni of the University furnish us with means to offer a prize for the best poem or poems written by K. U. students? We feel that it would be a source of much gratification to the donor, and could not but redound to the credit of the crimson. IN Knox College, the Alma Mater of so many magnificent orators the Oratorical Association is not a passive organization confirming itself to a couple of contests each year but is an active factor in college circles taking charge of the program on "national fete days, such as Washington's birthday. Decoration day, etc. This is an excellent plan and one K. U.'s association could pattern after with profit to itself and K. U.