Bowdoin Orient . nce,Single Copies, $ cents. Remittances should be made to the Business Editor. Com-munications in 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. Entered at the Post-Office at Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. XIX., No. 5—June 26, 1889. Editorial Notes 07 A Face and a Fancy, 70 Freshman Class Supper 71 The Tablets in Memorial


Bowdoin Orient . nce,Single Copies, $ cents. Remittances should be made to the Business Editor. Com-munications in 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. Entered at the Post-Office at Brunswick as Second-Class Mail Matter. XIX., No. 5—June 26, 1889. Editorial Notes 07 A Face and a Fancy, 70 Freshman Class Supper 71 The Tablets in Memorial Hall, 73 Prof. Robinsons Junior Reception, 74 A Toast, 75 Brunswick Sesqui-Centennial 75 Baccalaureate Sermon by President Win. DeWitt Hyde 84 Class Day, 89 Class-Day Oration 91 Class-Day Poem, 94 Medical Graduation 90 Parting Address of Medical School 97 Board of Overseers, 99 Phi Beta Kappa, 100 Commencement Day, 101 Presidents Reception 10R Book Reviews, 107 Collegii Tabula 110 Personal HI College World, 112. One of the most significant featuresof the celebration was the constant referencewhich the speakers made to our college. Itwould almost seem that they were celebrat-ing the one hundred and fiftieth anniversaryof Bowdoin instead of the town in which itis situated. And truly the memories of theold town on the flats and those of the oldcollege on the hill can never be could be more flattering than the trib-ute received from our distinguished alumnusof bO, whose massive and overawing pres-ence, heavy, penetrating voice, strong, flowingrhetoric, and keen, comprehensive mind madehim the very rallying point of his party inthe recent tariff crisis in the House of Repre-sentatives. Mr. Reed said : Many a manbesides myself can say that to have been grad-uated at the college on the hill is one of thegreat good fortunes of his life. Bowdoin hasmany superiors in wealth and size, but for theproduction of men of sound sense, culture, in-tellectual grasp, and capaci


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbowdoino, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookyear1890