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Page 13 text:
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s:-'qv- 0 v'ff'f's'--'v's 'wv ,ww 'ws' '4 N' We 'ww' we My We Host' -we-'-fo Q' we-. 'ws we we we ww 'ws we- -ww 4 Q- 'ww 'ww' 'awww-w 'cw 1 Xwufx' f i, X '- 3' .. f. a . .. . . v , . 0w,..fx.,.,. s.,,fx,,fs.,, x, ,fs H1 ,Hn ,fx .fx uf Af , fx fx, A fx, fx fy, A, A fs, fx fx., A fy. A ,A fs fx, fs Mg':':1Qsh:v:'-fha:-Lsh.ash: QQ: :ML QW, wh 4.82. AV, Q, QV, 489, QW: NY, M. Q. QW, 1eQ.'.+M' QV, .851 SY, key, .our QV. QW, ' 0 ' 9 0 ' .f oreiaze --on? w ' ROM the twenty-eighth WESLEYAN OLLA PODRIDA, greetings: We lay aside the editorial spectacles very Well satisfied with their 5 I revelations. As usual they reveal some unswept corners, dark and musty with something more than age, but in the main very considerable enterprise and successful activity. Few changes have taken place in the faculty, but two of these are events of great sadness to all the sons and the friends of our Alma Mater. ' The death of Professor George L. Westgate in june last not only robbed a popular and important department of the one who had founded it and brought it to its present degree of efficiency, but came to each heart as a personal sorrow. In February we were again called upon to mourn the loss of a beloved teacher and friend, in the death of Professor C. S. Harrington. . Mr. A. W. Harris, M. A., '80, during 1882-4 tutor of mathematics, was made Instructor in the department left vacant by the death of Professor Westgate. In the Department of Philosophy the place of Mr. I-Ioffman, called to the chair of Philosophy in Union College, was filled by Mr. E. I-I. Sneath, B. D., Yale, '84, Professor Winchester has this year no assistant. Mr. Wood, B. A., '85, was retained as assistant in Physics. Professor Van Vleck left at the beginning of the spring term for a few months in Europe. It is' interesting to note that the class of '86 will be the first the Professor has failed to see graduate from Wesleyan since 1848. Besides a number of newspaper articles and lectures by several members of the faculty, Professor Winchester has edited an edition of Selections from Addison for the Chautauqua Garnet Series. Professor Rice, in connection with Professor Verrill of Yale, will shortly have ready for publication a Manual of Zoology and Paleontology. Professor Atwater has published in the Amer- ican Chemical 9-'aufmzl Acquisition of Nitrogen by Plants, translated and republished in Germany by Baron H. Von Liebigg in the last Report of the Massachusetts Labor Bureau, Food Consumption 5 and in the forthcoming Report of the U. S. Fish Commission, an article on the Chemistry of Fish. Mr. Barrows has furnished for the Standard Natural History the article on C35 fo ' SV so X-, we ye ff. VM- V. 1,..'.A-,,,,- IM- 'fe H- ,.A ',.- f. .. . , 1 X ff, fl, ,, H- fn -f 9 Q 9 Q 0 O Q O 4 Q O, Q Q Q Q Q V Q W W v v 0 6 Q 9 9 6 9 9 Q V J 0 8 QS 28 be M929 we webs W9 1 '-'H'-H9-Q----foto!--.o-..-0 Q Q fo Q Q wi-who Q Q- Q are Q Q fs, Q-Q -of o for ww o o Q Q, Q Q Q QQQQI . H.. . uf. ,HA n.,,.x.hfr.x.n-,ax f,n,.x.n.,.x.n.:-x.x.n:..xx nam A...tx.f-w.a,h- in 41.10.af..A.1f.1f.m.n..-tx one f,. AA. ..x.M...s.n.,yx.0...m.A,..S.h..,N!,. ,.Q.Zf11Q.M...Q.w.'..N.Z..
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Page 12 text:
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Page 14 text:
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,,Q- ,s- we as of- at O Q D O 0 6 9 O 6 9 6 0 0 Q 0 Q Q 9 0 0 G O 0 0 0 0 0 0 Q Q Q ff so oo S so we Sfv S0 as as as as as as as er o o 0 o o o o o o o o o 0 9MN.+04,.sW,s9v..+'2.52,is9 0 9 Q 9 ' 6 0 Accipites, and has published in the flak a series of papers, extending through two years, on ft Birds of the Uruguayf' which has attracted a good deal of attention. Putnam's Sons have published a book on 't Evolution of To-day, by Dr. Conn, and from the same pen have appeared Marine Larvae and their Relation to Adults, and The Life History of Thalassemaef' in the L' Studies from Biology series of johns Hopkins University, Some Signifi- cant Results of Modern Embriologyf' in Srz'mre,- Limits of Organic Evo- lution, in the Aww-zimfz ZVa!m'fL!z'sz'. During the winter, members of the faculty delivered before the students a very interesting series of Monday afternoon lectures upon educational topics. To the Alumni who glance over these pages, we would suggest the in- quiry whether the management of this college is as liberal and enterprising in relation to its professors as it might be. Perhaps it is. If so, then we devoutly wish that an era of prosperity may set in for the Methodist Church. Harvard, reduced to a corps of instructors merely, might be a very good school: it would not be Harvard University. It is certainly true that we have some men on our faculty who require only freedom and support to bring our col- lege into fame through their renown. And we need it. We are glad to give further publicity to the statement made at the last college dinner that The old feud between students and faculty is dying out. It is true. Nevertheless we must add that until a few more of the Christian graces find fruition in the daily life of the former, and until the latter abandon an attitude sometimes arbitrary, and abolish dark-lantern dis- cipline, the funeral baked-meats of our expiring feud will roam their na- tive pastures. The college has received no large gift this year, but by the appreciation in stocks a considerable part of our loss has been regained. - The Seney scholarships, that pregnant source of internal disorders, re- ceiving nothing but maledictions from the unfortunate majority, condemna- tion from the faculty and curses from those who should have been their dearest friends, have been withdrawn. But in this connection, while we heartily commend our nobility of soul in despising the filthy lucre, we can but advert to the meagre inducements we offer in this line to ambitious scholars. The list of our Fellowships cannot, indeed, be called large. Our prizes may confer great honor, they certainly confer little else. Among the students there is a hearty, wide-awake, Wesleyan spirit g what- ever under-graduates can do to push their college to the front our men may be depended upon to attempt. That a college of barely two hundred men has furnished, equipped and trained a foot-ball team that has fought its way to third place among the colleges of the country, may be modestly cited as a pointer, The unavoidable load of debt under which the association en- CSD ff X- was . ,, . . , A N ov fc 4s ,Q ffv 0+ -as .X fs ,, e o o e Q ,, . ' ' ' ' ef Q 0 0 an at in 0 0 f w, Q Q rw 'Q Q fs rs Q f Q 0 o o Q o o C Q O o 0 ,N by of we as as as as as as Vgswsthsxksa saga '- fl -f,sf'00'0mmvt00ooew wwfsvvveooo ,XA swf, af, ,f ,sa X, ., , ,,,, W, ,, A,
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