Bowdoin Orient . om-munications in regard to all other matters should be directed tothe Managing Editor. Students, Professors, and Alumni are invited to contiibuteliterary articles, personals, and items. Contributions must beaccompanied bj- \viiters name, as well as the signature whichhe wishes to have appended. Entered at the Post-Office at Brunswick as Second Class mail matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XV., No. 13.—February 10, 1886. Fens Bandusiae, 157 Editorial Notes, 157 The Medic, 159 Parlier Cleavelaud, 159 Does It Pay? 161 Alumni Reunions, 162 Remarks of Rev. P. T. Bayley, 163 Collegii Tabula, 1


Bowdoin Orient . om-munications in regard to all other matters should be directed tothe Managing Editor. Students, Professors, and Alumni are invited to contiibuteliterary articles, personals, and items. Contributions must beaccompanied bj- \viiters name, as well as the signature whichhe wishes to have appended. Entered at the Post-Office at Brunswick as Second Class mail matter. CONTENTS. Vol. XV., No. 13.—February 10, 1886. Fens Bandusiae, 157 Editorial Notes, 157 The Medic, 159 Parlier Cleavelaud, 159 Does It Pay? 161 Alumni Reunions, 162 Remarks of Rev. P. T. Bayley, 163 Collegii Tabula, 163 Personal, 166 Editors Table, 167 Book Notices, 167 EONS BANDUSIAE. O fount Bandusian, in thy crystal tide The quivering rays of sunlight come and go Through thiols green shade, with which thine oak doth hideCool waters murmuring ever as they flow. Murmuring of days when on yon sloping bankVenusian Horace lay with thoughtful eye,Drew inspiration from thee as he wrote for us the songs that never We feel that an apology is due ourpatrons for the delay in issuing the presentnumber. At the time when the copy shouldhave been sent to the Journal office, aboutfour columns of matter had been handed in,but as that is a small part of twenty-two col-umns, and as Nature has not been so lavishin endowing the managing editor with liter-ary genius and versatility as she was in thecases of Longfellow and Hawthorne, wedared not venture to inflict upon innocentreaders the agony of reading an issue pro-duced by his unaided brain. In the face of this delay we trust that ourfinal appeal for brief articles to all who areinterested in their college publication, espe-cially members of the faculty and alumni,will not be unnoticed. A few such articles,received during the year, have materiallyaided in maintaining the standing of theOrient, and we are sincerely grateful tothose who have thus favored us. Again are we compelled to remind ourfellow-students who aspire to literary dis-tinc


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