132 Kansas University Weekly. Locals. Dick Rogers was in Topeka over Sunday. Mr. John Collins was in Topeka over Sunday. Revival services are being held in the Christain church. Mr. John S. McCleary was in Leavenworth over Sunday. Chas. Teas received a short visit from his father last Friday. Clyde Miller went down to Ottawa last Saturday on a business trip. Mr. R. Bright enjoyed an extended visit from his mother the past week. LaMonte Taylor spent Saturday and Sunday at his home in Kansas City. The truck scrapers were at work on the campus road-ways last Tuesday. The Betas initiated Mackay, Adams, Leonard and Attwater last Saturday night. A. Marshall, Pharmacy '99, passed the state examination on that subject at Topeka last week. Mrs. Dana Templin, of Kansas City, has been spending the past week with parents in Lawrence. The spring concert to be given by the Young Women's Christian Association promises to be unusually good. Al. Marshall returned to school Monday from his home at Topeka, where he was confined a week by sickness. Prof. Bartow and Mr. Macomb have a "Table for the Calculation of Analyses" in the last Kansas Quarterly. The ancient custom of wearing green on St. Patrick's day was duly observed by quite a number of student sympathizers. The Lorelei quartet sang at the Young Women's meeting last Tuesday afternoon. An unusually interesting meeting was held. The Medical Society of the University held an interesting meeting Saturday evening at the home of Mr. G. W. Stevens on Tennessee street. Talks and experiments upon hypnotism made the meeting a very profitable one. Notwithstanding the brutality of the pugilistic contest recently held at Carson, quite a good deal of interest was manifested by the students. The map of Lawrence and vicinity, as compiled by the Peripatets, is almost completed, and it will be seen in the WEEKLY bulletin board. H. E. Steele has returned to school after quite an extended absence. He has been at his home in Wichita, where his mother has been quite ill. M. J. Stichel, editor of the Baker Orange, and also head of the firm of Stichel & Co., stationers in Baldwin, visited on the hill Friday with friends. Will Walker was on the hill Monday visiting old friends. He is now employed as draftsman by the Belt Line of Kansas City. "Sal" is looking well. An informal reception was tendered the young men of the University Y. M. C. A. by Prof. and Mrs. Hopkins Saturday evening. A very delightful time was had. Prof. Dunlap gave the first of a series of lectures on Job Wednesday afternoon in his lecture room before an appreciative audience. This course of lectures is one of a series now being given under the auspices of the Young Men and Young Women's Christian Associations. The second lecture will be given next Wednesday at five in the same room. Last Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. Sterling received at their home the Dickinson county students now attending the University. Prof. Sterling read a paper on "Dickinson County and the University," which showed that over one hundred students from this county have pursued work at the University, and twenty of them have received diplomas. An organization