Bowdoin Orient . tores or on applica-tion to the Business Editor. 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. CONTENTS. Vol. XV., No. 16.—March 17, 1886. Tempe, , 193 Editorial Notes, 193 The Pedagogues Mash 194 Bowdoin in Liter


Bowdoin Orient . tores or on applica-tion to the Business Editor. 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. CONTENTS. Vol. XV., No. 16.—March 17, 1886. Tempe, , 193 Editorial Notes, 193 The Pedagogues Mash 194 Bowdoin in Literature, 195 Fishing at Bowdoin 197 Rollins Transformation, lv)9 Communication 201 CoLLEGii Tabula, 201 Personal, 203 Clippings, 203 TEMPE. In Tempes vale of winding green,Half-hirt by banks with leafy screen,Peneius wanders through the sceneToward the .a^gasan blue below. On beetling crag high towers the sunny cliff-side trails the vine,There spray and tendril intertwine,Oer glassy waters as they Whats in a name? Certainrecitations are held in rooms in MemorialHall, exhibitions take place in Memorial Hall,and Mr. Guilds lectures are delivered inMemorial Hall, but we sometimes wonderwhether strangers or towns-people, or evenstudents, when they enter the building, thinkof it as a memorial edifice. And shouldthey ? What is there to call attention to itspeculiar character, or to indicate in whosememory it was erected? Indeed, we doubtif all of the students could inform an inquir-ing visitor whether that stately granite pilewas erected in honor of Bowdoins earliestpatron, or some of her more recent sons. Mr. Packard, of the class of 66, in a com-munication to the Orient last fall, called at-tention to the singular omission and the fail-ure to have about the hall anything to turnthe attention towards those brave men whogave their lives to their country. Theirnoble sacrifice, nor the debt we owe them,can ever be forgotten, and shall theirAlma Mater rest content


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