Word: authorizes
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...mild caricature the funny side of many of the well-known University characters. The sketches are on the right-hand pages, while on the left appear humorously interesting remarks about the subject of each picture. The various best known and best liked faculty members are shown in what the author judges typical moods...
...eight plays were entered for judgment. Radcliffe graduates of the "47 Workshop" contributed 13 plays and graduates and undergraduates in the University each contributed six. A feature of the play competition this year is that the manuscripts were all submitted without names so that no personal knowledge of the author's previous work should influence the judges' decision...
...February Illustrated, however does not fulfill the promise which it pledges in its remarkable cover. We turn to a poem by C. H. Jacobs '16, the author of the mooted "Gott Mit Uns." "The Chant of Love" is hardly worth the prominence it receives, and it is to be regretted that the Illustrated makes such an unsuccessful departure from its usual program, venturing into the realm of poetry for no other reason--apparently--than to beat the newspapers representing the sequel to "Gott Mit Uns." "The Chant of Love" may be a journalistic triumph, but it is a literary disaster...
Henry James, famous author and brother of the equally famous philosopher, William James, died in London last night at the age of 72 years. He had been in poor health for some time. Famous the world over, he has been called the novelist who wrote like a philosopher. His early education was received in France and Switzerland, but he returned to this country and studied for a time in the University Law School. In 1911 he was granted the honorary degree of Doctor of Literature by the University...
...kind of Phillips Brooks House "ad," based on the assumption that anything labelled "Service," with a capital "S," is "real" and "vital." Even the conclusion, in which the heroine throws over the Open Hearth rather than lose her life-long lover, leaves a suspicion that perhaps the author retains a conviction that to be a Boy Scout Leader or the Coach of an Uplift Nine is after all the noblest ambition of Young American Manhood. Mr. Murdock's story is shorter, and laid right here in Cambridge--Memorial clock strikes nine, and the streets are covered with slush...