THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. 15 is new Phara- abouts and the or- ratory This d, and once Prof. to atarma- He is asso- A number of new doctors will be among the returning Faculty members. Prof.E.C. Franklin is now in Lawrence. He took the degree of Ph.D., at Johns Hopkins, where he has been studying the past year. E.D. Adams took the same degree at Ann Arbor, and has spent the Summer visiting there. Prof. Hopkins is now Ph.D., from Princeton, and went thence to attend the Asbury Park meetings. He will soon be back in Lawrence. Prof. L. I. Blake is working for the United States government this Summer. He is located at Tompkinsville, New York, not far from the metropolis, and, assisted by E. W. Caldwell, is connecting Sandy Hook Light Ship with the shore by his telephone system. His system of water communication has proved a success, as his telephone connecting Pollock Rip light with the shore last Summer was accepted by the United States government. ST. JOHNS, NEWFOUNDLAND, July 28, 1894. As every one knows, Prof. Dyche left Lawrence in June to join a party of scientists explorers and hunters who sailed for Greenland about the first of July. Prof. Dyche expected to make valuable additions to his collection of North American animals during the trip, and to return to Lawrence about the 15th of September. The following postal card, just received, gives the latest news from the party: DEAR FRIEND MOODY: Here we are in the above mentioned place. We ran into an iceberg July 17, some nine miles north of Belle Isle. Our ship was so damaged that we were compelled to pull into the nearest harbor, which was Cape Charles, on the coast of Laborador. After temporary repairs we came back to St. Johns, where we have been for the past week while our ship, the Miranda, has been put in order. We will go out to sea to-night, and will try to go straight to Greenland. The accident is quite serious for many of us, as it cuts our time for collecting very short. I have about 100 small specimens, and will do the best I can. Thus far circumstances have been very trying. You can address me at North Sydney, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, which place we expect to reach about September 1. Yours, with regards to all. L. L. DYCHE. Locals. M. E. Hickey, '93, is Principal at Winfield. T. H. Kelly, a Pharmacy graduate of '94, was in Lawrence a few days ago. H. C. Riggs, who graduated from the University in 1893, will teach the sciences at Beloit. Fred V. Phinney, of Fort Scott, will take a special course in Electrical Engineering at the University this year. Miss Laura Lockwood, '91, who has been teaching in the Lawrence High School, will take post graduate work at Yale. Two University students teach at Colum bus, Kansas. W. H. H. Sproul, '94, is Principal, and John Curran, Junior Law, '94, Assistant. Mr. James Darrah and Misses Effie Loader, Nannie and Louise Towne, and Miss Lucy Watson visited Miss Mary Barklay in Topeka Tuesday, August 7. Ella Anderson has spent the Summer at Kansas City and at her home in Morganville. She may go to Europe this Fall; if not, she will attend the University. Friends of Fred Oehler, graduate of the School of Pharmacy, will be sorry to learn of his dangerous illness at Chillicothe, Missouri, with inflammation of the bowels. The rooms in the Main Building, made vacant by the removal of the library to the Spooner Library Building, will be occupied by the Department of Law. The Law School opens September 12. Madge Fisher and the new bicycle, which she has been learning to ride this Summer, will arrive in Lawrence in time to enter the University. She says bicycling is "way ahead" of physical culture. Maude Nichols is making an extended trip in the East this Summer, and attended the national convention of the Kappa Kappa Gamma fraternity at Ithica, New York. She will return to the University in September. M. E. Hickey, '93, is Principal at Winfield. T. H. Kelly, a Pharmacy graduate of '94 was in Lawrence a few days ago. H. C. Riggs, who graduated from the University in 1893, will teach the sciences at Beloit. Fred V. Phinney, of Fort Scott, will take a special course in Electrical Engineering at the.University this year. Miss Laura Lockwood, '91, who has been teaching in the Lawrence High School, will take post graduate work at Yale. Two University students teach at Colum bus, Kansas. W. H. H. Sproul, '94, is Principal, and John Curran, Junior Law, '94 Assistant. Mr. James Darrah and Misses Effie Loader, Nannie and Louise Towne, and Miss Lucy Watson visited Miss Mary Barklay in Topeka Tuesday, August 7. Ella Anderson has spent the Summer at Kansas City and at her home in Morganville. She may go to Europe this Fall; if not, she will attend the University. Friends of Fred Oehler, graduate of the School of Pharmacy, will be sorry to learn of his dangerous illness at Chillicothe, Missouri, with inflammation of the bowels. Madge Fisher and the new bicycle, which she has been learning to ride this Summer, will arrive in Lawrence in time to enter the University. She says bicycling is "way ahead" of physical culture. The rooms in the Main Building, made vacant by the removal of the library to the Spooner Library Building, will be occupied by the Department of Law. The Law School opens September 12. Maude Nichols is making an extended trip in the East this Summer, and attended the national convention of the Kappa Kappa Gamma fraternity at Ithica, New York. She will return to the University in September.