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lleges and universities, to take care of the students' rooms. Used both in the United States and England. T' other day I caught my _bed-maker_, a grave old matron, poring very seriously over a folio that lay open upon my table. I asked her what she was reading? "Lord bless you, master," says she, "who I reading? I never could read in my life, blessed be God; and yet I loves to look into a book too."--_The Student_, Vol. I. p. 55, 1750. I asked a _bed-maker_ where Mr. ----'s chambers were.--_Gent. Mag._, 1795, p. 118. While the grim _bed-maker_ provokes the dust, And soot-born atoms, which his tomes encrust. _The College.--A sketch in verse_, in _Blackwood's Mag._, May, 1849. The _bed-makers_ are the women who take care of the rooms: there is about one to each staircase, that is to say, to every eight rooms. For obvious reasons they are selected from such of the fair sex as have long passed the age at which they might have had any personal attractions. The first intimation which your bed-maker gives you is that she is bound to report you to the tutor if ever you stay out of your rooms all night.--_Bristed's Five Years in an Eng. Univ._, Ed. 2d, p. 15. BEER-COMMENT. In the German universities, the student's drinking code. The _beer-comment_ of Heidelberg, which gives the student's code of drinking, is about twice the length of our University book of statutes.--_Lond. Quar. Rev._, Am. Ed., Vol. LXXIII. p. 56. BEMOSSED HEAD. In the German universities, a student during the sixth and last term, or _semester_, is called a _Bemossed Head_, "the highest state of honor to which man can attain."--_Howitt_. See MOSS-COVERED HEAD. BENE. Latin, _well_. A word sometimes attached to a written college exercise, by the instructor, as a mark of approbation. When I look back upon my college life, And think that I one starveling _bene_ got. _Harvardiana_, Vol. III. p. 402. BENE DISCESSIT. Latin; literally, _he has departed honorably_. This phrase is used in the English universities to signify that the student leaves his college to enter another by the express consent and approbation of the Master and Fellows.--_Gradus ad Cantab._ Mr. Pope being about to remove from Trinity to Emmanuel, by _Bene-Discessit_, was desirous of taking my rooms.--_Alma Mater_, Vol. I. p. 167. BENEFICIARY. One who receives anything as a gift, or is maintained by charity.--_Blackstone_. In American
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