Bowdoin Orient . siness Editor. Com-uiunicationsin regard to all other matters should be directed tothe Managing Editor. Students, Professors, and Alumni are invited to contributeliterary articles, personals, and items. Contributions must beaccompanied by writers name, as well as the signature whichhe wishes to have appended. In contributing to the Orient assume a nom de , andaffix it to each article contributed. Articles should be sentthrough the mail to the Managing Editor. Deposit with \V. Tolman a sealed envelope containing both your real andassumed name. Entered at the Post-Of


Bowdoin Orient . siness Editor. Com-uiunicationsin regard to all other matters should be directed tothe Managing Editor. Students, Professors, and Alumni are invited to contributeliterary articles, personals, and items. Contributions must beaccompanied by writers name, as well as the signature whichhe wishes to have appended. In contributing to the Orient assume a nom de , andaffix it to each article contributed. Articles should be sentthrough the mail to the Managing Editor. Deposit with \V. Tolman a sealed envelope containing both your real andassumed name. Entered at the Post-Oflice at Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XX., No. 9.—November 12, 1890. Editorial Notes 159 Miscellaneous : The Chapel Panels 161 My Friend and I, 162 Open the Library Sunday 163 Khyme and Keason: A Simile 104 Womans Wiles 164 Vive le Roi, 104 Our College Days 164 Sine Dubio, 105 Exchanges 165 CoLLEGii Tabula, 165 Athletics 168 Y. M. C. A 170 Personal 171 In Memoriam, 172 College World, 173. The establishment at Bowdoin ofa fund to be used in securing medical attend-ance for students in case of illness at college,is one of those charities which carries with itmuch more than the mere presentation ofthe money involves. It is still less than ayear ago that death removed from our midstone whose high character and sterling prin-ciples had earned for him the love andrespect of all his fellow-students, one whoseexample remains to be followed, with profitand advantage, by all who may come after presenting this fund, Mrs. Godfrey estab-lishes a memorial of her son, whose interestswere always so closely identified with theinterests of the college and whose greatestpride it was to acknowledge Bowdoin as hisAlma Muter. Where is the fitness, saysthe donor of the gift in a letter to a memberof the college, in bestowing upon a collegethe title ?AlmaMater^ and cherishing mother,if that college neglects the first privilege andduty of a mother, the care of her sons


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