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Word: gallishaw (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...mean literary talent. Next year under the stimulus of competition from the Harvard Magazine, combined with the more liberal policy which Mr. Garrison is expected to inaugurate, and contributions from men of such promise as Mr. Spaulding, the Harvard Advocate should reach the pinnacle of its ambition. JOHN GALLISHAW...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW ADVOCATE REVIEWED | 6/19/1919 | See Source »

...June number of the Harvard Magazine is crammed with stories: John Gallishaw contributes an amusing anecdote of feigned insanity, miss mason shows how an imitation of filial piety may be employed to extract money from innocent Westerners, M. A. Kister converts an atheist into a believer and man of power by means of a railway accident. So far there is nothing beyond the usual legerdemain of the short story; but Robert H. Chambers has achieved a more difficult feat. His "Nigger of No Account" is well no the way which leads to literature, because the author has sympathized with...

Author: By R. K. Hack., | Title: CURRENT ISSUE OF HARVARD MAGAZINE BRIEFLY REVIEWED | 5/27/1919 | See Source »

...have read with interest a delightfully cartooned article with a Latin title, which bore the signature "John Gallishaw" and appeared in the recent issue of the Harvard Magazine (White). It seems to be fashionable lately to cast aspersions on Senator Lodge. "Wily, plausible, insincere" he is called by our dean. Anything so vital as the proposed League of Nations must inevitably arouse considerable feeling, but is it not somewhat hasty to impugn suddenly shallowness to a man who has hitherto been accredited with sincerity if nothing else. The Latin heading ("She transit gloria Lodge") itself shows that Mr. Gallishaw once...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lodge Not Insincere. | 4/14/1919 | See Source »

...interests of these United Sates first, last and all the time. Between the two there is a deadlock. Which side a man takes depends on his philosophy of life-the only appeal that can be made for either is a flag flapping appeal. Nor does it seem that Mr. Gallishaw himself is quite immune from that sort of thing. "The feet of young men are making new foot prints in the sands of time" etc.; is that not an appeal to the enthusiasm rather than to the intelligence of the readers? GEORGE CROMPTON...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lodge Not Insincere. | 4/14/1919 | See Source »

...second number is vigorous, timely, promising, Dean Gallishaw, whose stout pen doesn't really need the backing of the reproduction of his fist, in Sic Transit Gloria Lodge (would not Laubiae be more euphonious?) fights the Senator as vigorously as he fought the Hun; his ardor thrills even if he isn't quite just. Perhaps,--to alter a little the words of the poet,--he sings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CURRENT HARVARD MAGAZINE SHOWS PROGRESSIVE TREND | 4/9/1919 | See Source »

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