THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. 7 It is unfortunate that examinations do not come immediately after New Years, while resolutions of fairness and honesty are yet unbroken, but it is not the annual but the daily resolutions that help us to be what we know we should be. Urbansky sells gents' furnishing goods cheaper than any other man in business. Boys when you want hats, caps, gloves winter clothes of any kind make The Boston a call. MRS. HAMPTON FLORAL ARTIST. Choice Cut Flowers always on hand, and artistically arranged on short notice for every occasion. Telephone 2733. Corner 10th and Main Streets Kansas City, Mo. I. C. G. The store for students' clubs to trade at. The cheapest and choicest line of fancy and staple groceries in the city. Students give us a call. INDIANA CASH GROCERY. A Greek weekly newspaper is one of the novelties at Cornell. An Ann Arbor student says that they have just two rules, namely: Students must not burn the college buildings nor kill any of the professors. - Ex The Nebraska foot-ball team has elected a captain for next year. Hamming and Flippin were the candidates and "Flip" was elected by a majority of one. It is very seldom that a more creditable college paper reaches our table than the Holiday number of The Nebraskan. It contains half-tones of the Editorial staff, Chancellor Canfield, Foot-ball team and several professors. The Amherst senate has been dissolved, as the faculty have not kept their part of the agreement but expelled a student without consulting the senate. The highest form of government is self-government but it must be individual self-government. When every student learns to look to his own conscience as the judge, and obey that—but alas, when? We think that the Student Life has the correct idea when it says; "Nothing keeps our colleges in touch with each other more than a good exchange list and a full exchange column. Rocky Mountain Collegian. This is exactly our opinion. We have a good exchange list, and trust to our successor to make a better exchange column than our poor efforts have ever succeeded in doing. If the Nebraska debators try as hard to defeat those from K. U. as they did to defeat each other it will at least be exciting. One of the contestants took several books from the library just simply to keep them from the hands of the other side. The matter is being investigated by the Faculty Thirty-two contestants registered for the debates but fifteen of these backed out. Prof. Hadley, of Yale, is to introduce a system of instruction in his classes in political economy. He will substitute debates for recitations. A division of thirty members of the class is to choose a subject for debate. The negative side then draws up a complaint similar to a legal paper. This in turn is met by a reply from the affirmative. The arguments are then made by the "lawyers" on each side and finally the debate is thrown open to the house. Yale News.