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...silence belongs with Victory, Rescue, Nostromo and the other major masterpieces of his work. The style is a little simpler, a little less gorgeous, than in some of his novels. But it is no less masterly, and the men and women described are so wholly alive that they haunt the mind. Peyrol himself deserves a place beside Lingard and Heyst and the other great wanderers, and throughout the pages of The Rover, Mr. Conrad gives us anew that impression of space and completion that is stamped upon all his best work-the impression that he has not merely written...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Brother of the Coast-- | 12/17/1923 | See Source »

...hooded spectre will haunt Benjamin Irish to the end of his days. The spectre is Zev, American three-year-old, who looked through his white hood at the hindquarters of Mr. Irish's Papyrus for only the opening seconds of the International race at Belmont Park, L. I. Zev won by five lengths...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Race | 10/29/1923 | See Source »

...universal language. At last Eskimos and Ethiopians will be able to converse congenially; perhaps, in the twenty-first century, the debates of the League of Nations Assembly will no longer be mutilated by interpreters; and in later years the University's hoodoo, the language requirement will cease to haunt the undergraduates...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WAKING THE DEAD | 5/28/1923 | See Source »

...zealous social service workers of Phillips Brooks House are missing an opportunity. Instead of going to distant Roxbury or South Boston they might save themselves carfare and do Cambridge a good turn by opening a campaign to Clean Up Harvard Square. The muckers that haunt its precincts are a favorite subject for humorists:-- their pleas for "scrambles"; their shrill persistency in disposing of "Globe, Trawler, Transcri't, and A-Merrycan"; their conversational invasions of unprotected dormitories, are all notorious. But the social service workers seem to have overlooked them. If we stop to think of them seriously, the dangers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WHERE CHARITY BEGINS | 12/1/1921 | See Source »

...noble wounded French officers arrived in Cambridge. The 3,500,000 starving children in Europe are the last phase of the Great War. America cared for 6,500,000 of these children in 1919. We cannot turn these invisible guests into the street; if we do they will haunt our homes for generations.--Harvard will do her part. Herbert Hoover...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HERBERT HOOVER'S MESSAGE TO HARVARD MEN | 1/14/1921 | See Source »

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