THE HESPERIAN. In some sort the Christian Association seems inclined to run opposition to this Amcrico-Tcutonic Kncipc and keeps open house with a good assortment of recent periodical literature, a piano, songbooks, and facilities for letter writing. The organ ization is entirely crccdless except in so far as a certain form of belief is implied by the name, but its members arc an car nest, manly lot of fellows and its not inconsiderable influence is for good. In connection with the Johns Hopkins House of Commons I have even noticed at times a hint of political caucussing such as used to make the U. of N. hum through all its structure from The Hesperian office to the band room; but it has al ways speedily subsided and the unmitigated grind gone on as before. As to the make up of this body more can be learned from the articles that appeared in the New York Nation some months ago than I know about it or should care to rehearse if I did know. In his recent course of physical lectures on physical culture in America Dr. Hartwcll, who has charge of our gymnasium here, pointed out the rather remarkable fact that no institution south of Mason & Dixon's line has ever distinguished itself in athletics. I realize as I did not before coming here .that Balti more is not at the cast but at the south. Clubs from here have met Princeton men and others but not often with any degree of success. Towards the latter part of last season a football team from Swathmorc, a little Quaker college in Pennsylvania, beat our players most wouilly. It rather tickled us western men, however, to sec this because we sympathized with the college cry of the Swathmoreans: "Rah, rah, rah; rah, rah rah; co-cd-u-ca-tion, rah!" The fellows here are rather giv en to lawn tennis (played in a brick paved court) than to any. thing more muscular, and this would of itself in some measure indicate the latitude. Aside from inter-collegiate competition however, the gymnasium is an excellent health preserver. Un der graduates must, and post graduates may, have physical examination and get directions from Dr. Hartwcll as to the best course of exercises for them to pursue. For this purpose the candidate fdls out a schedule giving an account of his physical history and that of all his ancestors back as far as he knows anything about them. Then he is turned loose in a small room filled with villainous looking engines and told to array himself "in the close fitting costume of the Greek Slave', uynus the hand-cufis; then Dr. H. enters with a "steel tape'i measure and proceeds to apply this and other instruments equally accurate, chilly, and disagreeable to the cringing form of the examined. The outcome of it all is a book and sched. ulc carefully setting forth all his imperfections and telling him what to do and .what not to do. A college without a gymna sium is sadly behind the times. Elective studies and special work in single departments has been and is the hobby here. When young Dr. Ross, of Har vard, who prides himself on not knowing any history at all save what is connscted with the history of land tenure visited here a year or so ago , I have heard it said that he and some of the narrower Hopkins students of history got together and had quite a time exulting over what they didn't know. At present, however, there is something of a tendency the other 'way. Two "minors" are required instead of one, and in the historical department the counter movement has taken the hor rible form of examinations in general history. We have, or will have, bad during the year six of the egotism extractors, covering the not brief period of history from the rise of Baby lon 10 the fall of Napoleon Bonaparte. Such a programme opens up what I think Oscar Browning would call "a vista of eternal cram." While in Nebraska I used to suppose that a good deal of the adverse criticism directed against the U. of N. was induced simply by the fact that it was a state institution and because it had not yet won much of a name for itself. But neither its endowment nor its fame can shield the J. H. U. from the most virulent attacks. The Baltimore Sun, the lead ing democratic paper here, scolds continually and passionately about nearly everything the trustees sec fit to do. It howls because the University was not located at Clifton (near which place the proprietors oi the Sun own real estate); wails because so much money has been put into the buildings for the J. H. Hospital; gets sarcastic because so little has been spent on buildings for the J. H. U. , and becomes almost profane over the fact that so many of the fellowships are awarded to men from the northern states. They even tried to make the legis lature coerce the trustees in certain particulars but could not succeed in getting this done. To be sure the trustees, are somewhat more independent than the U. of N. Regents but not all their ways arc ways oi pleasantness, and not all their paths arc peace. "There is neither far nor near, There is neither there nor here, . . Nor any long ago" To that cranky, "Thus and so Your college should be run." Warner, 85. An editorial notice by a southern exchange of Charles Dud ley Warner's late article in the Princeton Review on "Society in the New South" expresses sentiments which gain our hearty approbation. The writer affirms that, with the regime there also passed away much of the romance, pride, conserva ism, exclusivcness and provincialism of the South. One hought we consider especially noteworthy: that the South had an aristocracy of blood; but in its place they must now choose between an aristocracy of wealth and one of education The tone of the article speaks well for the character of the men who arc to become leaders of this New South in the near future. With such men wc can strike the hand of unity and good feeling. The college press is now discussing the question of college honors. The qucston is well sustained on both sides. It is not necessary at present to declare an opinion on the subject , but it will be interesting to notice an article which appears in a late exchange, adverse to college honors. It should be re marked, however, that the term "college honors" should be defined or the champions of either side are liable to a misun derstanding of their opponents. The writer of the above mentioned r.rticle asserts that college honors (meaning class honors at the close of the course) are useful neither in business life nor in any of the professions, and consequently not at all useful for anything outside of college; that in college the sys tem can be only good as an incentive to work and a scource oi personal satisfaction to the winner of honors. College honors are not a proper incentive to work and tend to blind the stu dent to the true value of an education by holding before him the glittering bauble of a "college honor." Therefore college honors should go. So reasons our worthy friend. Next The Hesperian has not been very industrious in reading the latest from Sam Jones and is somewhat astonished to learn from an exchange that the worthy gentleman has been clas ing the American College as one of the chosen instruments of Satan. As far as we can learn the Rev. Samuel bases his ar gument, or rather his opinion, on the fact that he woulq pre fer to "learn his AB Cs in heaven rather than translate Greek hell." The sentiment is true and perhaps elevating, but we certainly fail to see its bearing on the question at issudl