Bowdoin Orient . 66.—Prof. Henry L. Chapman has recently been elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. yy.—Mr. Charles W. Morse has recently re-turned from a trip abroad. While there he touredItaly and Germany. When he left this countryhis health was despaired of, but traveling and themedical treatment that he received abroad has im-proved his condition greatly. The citizens of hishome town, Bath, are planning a celebration inhis honor when he shall return to it. ii-—Arthur H. Cole 11 has been awarded ascholarship in economics at Harvard. UNIVERSITY OF MAINE SUMMER TERMJu


Bowdoin Orient . 66.—Prof. Henry L. Chapman has recently been elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. yy.—Mr. Charles W. Morse has recently re-turned from a trip abroad. While there he touredItaly and Germany. When he left this countryhis health was despaired of, but traveling and themedical treatment that he received abroad has im-proved his condition greatly. The citizens of hishome town, Bath, are planning a celebration inhis honor when he shall return to it. ii-—Arthur H. Cole 11 has been awarded ascholarship in economics at Harvard. UNIVERSITY OF MAINE SUMMER TERMJune 26 to August 6, college courses for students to make upconditions in the following subjects:Chemistry, Domestic Science, Economics and Soci-ology. Education, English. French, German, HistoryLatin. Manna) Training. Mathematics and Astron-omy, and Physics. Advanced courses in these; subject* may also betaken to count toward a degree. For circular J. Aley, President, Orono, Maine. BOWDOIN ORIENT BOWDOIN ORIENT VOL. XLII BRUNSWICK. MAINE., JUNE. 7, 1912 NO. 9 MASQUE AND GOWN PLAY—IVY EVE The first of the Ivy Week festivities was theannual play produced by the Masque and Gown,the College Dramatic Club. This year the clubpresented A Pair of Spectacles in the TownHall, before a good sized audience. The partswere well taken the leading characters being as-sumed by old favorites. Cedric Crowell as UncleGregory and Artie Welch as Benjamin Goldfinchwere especially good. THE BUGLE-IVY MORNING The 1913 edition of the Bugle—the sixty-seventh volume of Bowdoins annual publication—appeared this morning. The book this year is agood-sized volume, attractively bound in graycloth with red lettering—red and gray being theclass colors of 1913. The cover design is ex-tremely simple but effective—being the Bowdoinseal under the words Bugle—1913. In contents this edition is the largest ever pub-lished, containing 310 pages of reading matter ex-clusive of


Size: 1466px × 1704px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorbowdoino, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913