398 Kansas University Weekly. Locals. Mrs. Ed. Schall visited us Tuesday. Mr. Ted. Thacher is a pledged Phi Psi. Miss Abbey Noyes has re-entered school. Miss Thacher spent last Sunday in Topeka. Miss Van Amburg of Emporia enrolled last Tuesday. The Calculus class will recite next term to Prof. Miller. Miss Edith Snow entertained the Whist Club Friday night. Miss Delia Humphrey, Arts'95, was a visitor on the hill Tuesday. The grade cards were handed out to the anxious throng last Tuesday. Miss Marian Innes has entered the University and will do special work in the Arts. Miss Gertrude Boughton entertained a few friends at cards last Tuesday evening. F. E. Case went to his home in Lindon last week to attend the wedding of his brother. Thos. Harley represented the University at the Kansas Day Banquet in Topeka Friday. Prof. Blackmar has been quite ill and was unable to meet his classes the first of the week. Clyde Miller went to Topeka Saturday to arrange for a production of The Rivals there. Mr. A. E. Wardner, of Kansas City, who attended the University last year has again enrolled. Miss Lela Douthart who has been teaching the past term in Concordia has again re-entered the University. Miss Elizabeth Stone and Miss Clara Lynn were guests of Miss Shellabarger in Topeka over Sunday. Mr. Reg. Brewster returned to his home in White Cloud, Wednesday. He will not be back this year. the milling business in Kansas City the last term, has again entered the University. Mr. Fred D. Northrup, who attended the University last year and has been engaged in Howard Leonard who was taken sick shortly after the opening of school has returned looking very well. Prof. Brownell and the Law students are already arranging for the Law Banquet which will occur early in June. E. S. Lindas has been compelled to leave school and will go to Topeka to become manager of his father's hardware store there. Mr. R. R. Keeley returned to school Monday. He was called to his home in Augusta some weeks since by the death of his father. Anderson A. Ewart is still confined to his bed at his home in Kansas City. It will take sometime for him to be able to be up and about. A paper which Prof. Miller recently read before the Kansas Academy of Science will appear in the February number of Popular Astronomy. Last Tuesday evening Misses Crawford, Henrick, Mendenhall, and Pollman entertained a small company at whist in honor of Miss Vickers who returned to her home in Paola, Saturday. It is whispered about school, that a member of the graduating class retired to the privacy of his parental domicile in order to encourage a certain fungus growth in the efforts to come into the visible presence of the envious lower classmen. But after days, yet even weeks of untiring, unostentatious, unprofitable and yet ever patient and hopeful waiting, he took a last farewell look into the family mirror, and with a sorrowful yet determined expression of countenance he consigned to the cruel barber the right final result of his maidenly efforts, and returned to his studies a wiser and yet not hopelessly beautiful young man.