14 THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. THE FACULTY. H. F. Jones has been in California. Prof. Penny is taking special work in music at Harvard. M. E. Rice is doing work in higher physics at Chicago. Prof. Canfield is enjoying his vacation at Manchester, Vermont. Prof. Bailey has returned to his old home in Middlefield, Conn., for the Summer. Prof. F. H. Hodder has been at work this Summer on a book on Civil Government. Prof. E. Haworth has been at work all Summer on the geological survey of the State. F. B. Dains will spend the coming Winter at Chicago University, where he has a scholarship. E. C. Case has a scholarship at Cornell, and will study geology and mineralogy there this year. Prof. Olin is now taking a rest. He conducted institutes at Eldorado and Oskaloosa this Summer. Prof. Dunlap has been in Lawrence since his return from Ohio, where he was called last May by the death of his father. Prof. Engle has made a month's visit in Ohio, and during the rest of the time has been busied with his duties as registrar. Prof. Robinson was in Lawrence until the first of July. He has now gone back to visit his old home after an absence of seventeen years. M. A. Barber, K. U. '91, and since then graduate from Harvard, will return to the University this year to take the position of Assistant in Botany. Prof. V. L. Kellogg, who resigned to become Associate Professor of Entomology at Leland Stanford University, started for California the last of July. Prof. Blackmar attended lectures and studied economic questions at Chicago University the fore part of the Summer. He is spending the month of August in Colorado. H. F. Jones has been in California. Prof. Penny is taking special work in music at Harvard. M. E. Rice is doing work in higher physics at Chicago. Prof. Canfield is enjoying his vacation at Manchester, Vermont. Prof. Bailey has returned to his old home in Middlefield, Conn., for the Summer. Prof. F. H. Hodder has been at work this Summer on a book on Civil Government. Prof. E. Haworth has been at work all Summer on the geological survey of the State. F. B. Dains will spend the coming Winter at Chicago University, where he has a scholarship. E. C. Case has a scholarship at Cornell, and will study geology and mineralogy there this year. Prof. Olin is now taking a rest. He conducted institutes at Eldorado and Oskaloosa this Summer. Prof. Dunlap has been in Lawrence since his return from Ohio, where he was called last May by the death of his father. Prof. Engle has made a month's visit in Ohio, and during the rest of the time has been busied with his duties as registrar. Prof. Robinson was in Lawrence until the first of July. He has now gone back to visit his old home after an absence of seventeen years. M. A. Barber, K. U. '91, and since then graduate from Harvard, will return to the University this year to take the position of Assistant in Botany. Prof. V. L. Kellogg, who resigned to become Associate Professor of Entomology at Leland Stanford University, started for California the last of July. Prof. Blackmar attended lectures and studied economic questions at Chicago University the fore part of the Summer. He is spending the month of August in Colorado. S. R. Boyce, who has been absent on leave for a year taking special work in Pharmacy at Michigan University, will be back in time to assist Prof. Sayre this Fall. Prof. Stevens has spent the Summer working at the University. He contributed a paper on the "Russian Thistle" to the last Bulletin of the Kansas State Board of Agriculture. Prof. and Mrs. Carruth are spending the month of August in Colorado. Prof. Carruth has been making a large number of speeches over the State in the interest of the Woman Suffrage Amendment. He will return to Lawrence about September 1. The reputation of the University as the home of lecturers and University extensionists has been ably sustained by Prof. Miller. He lectured at Hiawatha a few days ago. He is Summering as well as simmering under the hot August sun at Lawrence. Prof. F. O. Marvin spent the month of June at Camp Moral with the Civil Engineers. He is now in New York attending the meetings of the Association of American Engineers, and will read a paper before the educators' branch of that body. Miss Carrie Watson, with the exception of a week's rest at Hot Springs, Ark., has divided her time between preparations for moving the books to Spooner Library and frantic endeavors to have the contractors hurry up the work on Spooner Library so that she may move. Prof. Sayre has been engaged on his new book-Organic Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy. This will be a book of about 400 pages, which will review the plants and products of the organic kingdom, and the organic products of the chemist's laboratory produced by synthetic chemical action. This is the first work of the kind published, and undoubtedly will find a high place at once among the many new works of to-day. Prof. Sayre leaves soon for Asheville, N.C., to attend the meeting of the American Pharmaceutical Association about August 28. He is secretary of the scientific section of the association.