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...other way does the November Advocate show its rejuvenation more strikingly than in its editorials; tinged with a deliciously pungent humor, they stand a sturdy proof that Mother Advocate has abandoned her myopic spectacles of prejudice and reaction to gaze forth once more with the vision of the real Harvard. Prose and verse, fiction and discussion, all show, the same freshness, and are of almost equal merit...

Author: By John Cowles, | Title: "MOTHER ADVOCATE" BACK ON THE JOB FOR HARVARD | 11/5/1919 | See Source »

...application largely removed, it is at least open to question whether students profit more from the pursuit of study under supervision than under a system of voluntary performance. It is said that many of the men, in spite of the watchful eye of the observer, do no more than gaze stupidly at their books or add their talent to the well-wrought benches in Sever...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUPERVISED STUDY. | 11/22/1918 | See Source »

...hostile line. Yet it is, we hope, an omen of future victories. If the coming millions live up to the standards of the first hundred thousands the final outcome cannot be in doubt. The German successes now need not loom too large in our minds when we gaze toward the future. Our war machine is getting under...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE AMERICAN SOLDIER | 6/7/1918 | See Source »

discreditable, is uneasy, as the sonnets of the young (and even of the old) are wont to be; the Horatian verses to Chloe are imperfect, but promising,--"Therefore lift up your blushing gaze, and quit your all-sufficient mother." Mr. Auslander's sonnet, like all his work, shows talent and skill; but, hardened though we are to mixed novelties, we cannot accept as genuine his prayer for "the feathered thrill of birds." Mr. La Farge's "To My Goddess" exhibits feeling for the music of verse and contains pretty details. Unhappily the reviewer's copy omits the last line...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Current Advocate Creditable; Better Than Some Predecessors | 4/13/1918 | See Source »

Therefore as we put in our Coop books the dates for these day of morning and plan just how long a period we will have for revelry, let us gaze into the dark future and prepare. The prospect is not too cheering, yet every cloud has a silver lining and in the case of the mid-years the bright spots come from the being ready weeks ahead...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIRST CALL FOR MID-YEARS | 12/4/1917 | See Source »

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