Kansas University Weekly. 157 LOGALS. Chancellor Snow was in Topeka Tuesday Give your type-writing work to C. E. Rose Have your themes type-written. C. E. Rose will do the work for you. The Category club will hold its annual wake Saturday night. At the Chemical Seminary yesterday, Mr. Wagner spoke on "The Composition of Expired Air." The beginning German class had its final quiz on the reader Friday and took up Wilhelm Tell Monday. Mr. H. F. Jones dropped down upon his classes in Eighteenth Century Literature last Monday with quizzes. Dr. E. E. Wright and wife, of Emporia, father and mother of Ralph Wright,'97 visited the University Tuesday. The board of regents met in annual session yesterday, but up to the hour of going to press no information as to their proceedings has been disclosed. Prof. Penny has received an invitation from Prof. Willard Fiske, formerly of Cornell, but now a resident of Florence, Italy, to spend the summer in Florence. The chapel choir now occupies the rostrum at chapel exercises. The large piano on the platform is used in the service, the smaller one having been removed. At the University ball in the Armory tonight, Buch's orchestra, consisting of the following pieces will furnish the music: First, second and third violins, cello, bass, clarinet, first and second cornets, drums and trombone. The music promises to be the best ever heard at a ball in Lawrence. When Marshall's band of Topeka wishes to give an excellent musical concert it sends to Lawrence for Louis, John and Bert Buch and Walter Ball. When the Symphony Society of Kansas City wishes extra good music it secures the services of these four men. They will play at the University ball. The gymnasium girls need out-door practice. They think it an injustice that they are obliged to practice indoors continually, when the boys can practice wherever they please. Suitable out-door training quarters should be secured for them so that they can have perfect freedom of movement and obtain plenty of fresh exhilarating spring air. LOST:—Last Monday morning in the main building, a small note-book containing valuable data, the leaves fastened together with a brass brad. The finder will please leave it with the managing editor of the WEEKLY and receive suitable compensation. The Adelphic literary society has again changed its time of meeting. This time it settled on Saturday night. The attendance has decreased since the meetings have been held on Thursday nights. Prof. E. M. Hopkins returned Sunday morning from Independence where he delivered on Saturday evening, the last of a series of University extension lectures. The Girard High School has lately been admitted to the list of accredited high schools in class I., having fulfilled the requirements stated in the catalogue. The annual catalogue is now in the hands of the state printer and will probably be out about the middle of April. Mr. Oscar Lane has retired from school and is assisting with the spring work on a farm a few miles out of town. University ball tonight. If you wish to have a good time, go; if not, send a substitute. All kinds of type-writing done cheap by C. E. Rose, 726 Mississippi Street. The inter-state oratorical contest will be held in Topeka, May 7th. The psychology class has at last been supplied with text-books. D. D. Gear is now in Fort Worth, Texas.