THE STUDENTS JOURNAL. 13 F. H. Moore will probably study law. Miss Laura Radford will teach school. Ed. Harvey will spend the coming year on the farm. Fred Howell has a position in the Fredonia High School. Sherman Ploughe will follow the vocation of the pedagogue. H. D. Wilson is engaged in stock raising near Holton, Kansas. I. R. Rothrock will be sugar chemist on a Louisiana plantation. Miss Rose Morgan may be in Lawrence again the coming year. L. A. Lowther is Principal of the Cottonwood Falls High School. Eli Cann expects to graduate from the K. U. Law School next year. E. W. Palmer will act as Assistant Principal of the High School at Winfield. The bar claims MacGregor Douglass. He will practice law in Oklahoma City. S. C. Bloss will have charge of the Pleasanton High School, acting as Principal. J. E. Baker will teach Botany and Entomology in the Wellington High School. Miss May Spencer will go to Philadelphia to receive instruction in librarian's work. A. L. Corbin will teach in the High School of Augusta, Kansas, during the next school year. R. E. Blackman expects to attend the McCormick Theological Seminary at Chicago, Illinois. J. F. Carlson will take a special course in French and German at Columbia College, New York. Archie Hogg still has his heart fixed on study at K. U., and will take a course at the Law School. J. H. Mustard has decided to inflict himself upon the High School students of Enterprise, Kansas. THE CLASS OF '94. F. H. Moore will probably study law Miss Laura Radford will teach school. Ed. Harvey will spend the coming year on the farm. Fred Howell has a position in the Fredonia High School. Sherman Ploughe will follow the vocation of the pedagogue. H. D. Wilson is engaged in stock raising near Holton, Kansas. I. R. Rothrock will be sugar chemist on a Louisiana plantation. Miss Rose Morgan may be in Lawrence again the coming year. L. A. Lowther is Principal of the Cottonwood Falls High School. Eli Cann expects to graduate from the K. U.Law School next year. E. W. Palmer will act as Assistant Principal of the High School at Winfield. The bar claims MacGregor Douglass. He will practice law in Oklahoma City. J. E. Baker will teach Botany and Entomology in the Wellington High School. S. C. Bloss will have charge of the Pleasanton High School, acting as Principal. Miss May Spencer will go to Philadelphia to receive instruction in librarian's work. R. E. Blackman expects to attend the McCormick Theological Seminary at Chicago, Illinois. A. L. Corbin will teach in the High School of Augusta, Kansas, during the next school year. J. F. Carlson will take a special course in French and German at Columbia College, New York. Miss Mary Barkley will act as Assistant Principal in the Minneapolis High School. B. H. Hill will see to the financial interests of the country in his father's bank at Neodesha, Kansas. C. H. Humphrey, Law School, '94, it is reported will practice his profession in the State of Washington. R. L. Hoff has been teaching in the normal institutes in Nebraska, and will teach school in that State the coming year. W. Cornelius Fogle will devote himself to the welfare of humanity selling "goot goots" in his father's store at Williamsburg, Kan. The University has not yet lost its hold on the heart strings of its favorite son William Henry Harrison Piatt. He will study law the coming year. Horton, Kansas, early in the season obtained a firm grasp upon E. I. O'Bryon as Principal of her High School, and has not yet decided to let him go. The city schools of Halstead, Kansas, are not yet willing to dispense with the services of H. O. Kruse, but have made him their Superintendent for the coming year. Harvard has decided to extend an invitation to '94's great class politician, C. S. Griffin, to come and direct affairs there and has offered him a scholarship with the invitation. Lorin B. Sears has been spending a short time in Michigan. He is undecided as to what he will do next year; possibly it will be further study in literary lines at some university. Miss Clara Bosworth, '94, stopped in Lawrence for a day on her way to Colorado. She expects to spend August and September in Colorado, and will probably remain at home the rest of the school year. James Vance May has given up politics and is now known as Doctor Jim. In company with D. H. Spencer and Ernest Robinson, of the class of '93, he will attend the Medical School at the University of Pennsylvania. Archie Hogg still has his heart fixed on study at K. U., and will take a course at the Law School. J. H. Mustard has decided to inflict himself upon the High School students of Enterprise, Kansas. Miss Mary Barkley will act as Assistant Principal in the Minneapolis High School. B. H. Hill will see to the financial interests of the country in his father's bank at Neodesha, Kansas. C. H. Humphrey, Law School, 194, it is reported will practice his profession in the State of Washington. R. L. Hoff has been teaching in the normal institutes in Nebraska, and will teach school in that State the coming year. W. Cornelius Fogle will devote himself to the welfare of humanity selling "goot goots" in his father's store at Williamsburg, Kan. The University has not yet lost its hold on the heart strings of its favorite son William Henry Harrison Piatt. He will study law the coming year. Horton, Kansas, early in the season obtained a firm grasp upon E. I. O'Bryon as Principal of her High School, and has not yet decided to let him go. The city schools of Halstead, Kansas, are not yet willing to dispense with the services of H. O. Kruse, but have made him their Superintendent for the coming year. Harvard has decided to extend an invitation to '94's great class politician, C. S. Griffin, to come and direct affairs there and has offered him a scholarship with the invitation. Lorin B. Sears has been spending a short time in Michigan. He is undecided as to what he will do next year; possibly it will be further study in literary lines at some university. Miss Clara Bosworth, '94, stopped in Lawrence for a day on her way to Colorado. She expects to spend August and September in Colorado, and will probably remain at home the rest of the school year. James Vance May has given up politics and is now known as Doctor Jim. In company with D. H. Spencer and Ernest Robinson, of the class of '93, he will attend the Medical School at the University of Pennsylvania.