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...without any likeness to the other college magazines. "The "Aristocrat" announces that "not with the eye of philosopher or critic, avoiding the quip and lesson of reformer, standing aside from bustle," it treads "the ways of antiquity," and it offers the modest hope that it may "calm the undergraduate mania for achievement with a leaven of whimsical humor...

Author: By Frederick L. Allen ., | Title: "THE ARISTOCRAT" IS SIGN OF DIVERSITY | 4/5/1921 | See Source »

...deliberately plans to "put one over" on the Faculty is not the clear thinker. He is still immature, still the small boy with a spit-ball mania. To him, his teacher is some far-off monster forcing down his throat--teaching--something that he is convinced will do him no good. His imagination makes his deceitfulness seem clever and in his cleverness he loses sight of the fact that the teacher is not the person who is there to teach but the person from whom he can learn. Failure to learn on the part of the student is no loss...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRACTICE OF "CRIBBING" | 1/27/1921 | See Source »

...fact that a score of blazes developed simultaneously shows it is unlikely the fire was accidental. So monstrous a plot could not logically have been concocted by men crazed with the "firebug" mania, and as Worcester is well-known for its radical element, the finger of guilt seems to point at Bolshevism. Coupled with previous and similar losses, and recent strikes in the manufacturing plants on the same scene, the case against the "reds" gathers weight. Until definite proof is offered, of course, it were folly to assume on the spur of the instant that any special group...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE WORCESTER FIRE | 1/20/1921 | See Source »

...music is light and catchy, and "The Old Town", "The Star of Hitchy-Koo", "Dance-O'Mania", "Moon of Love" and "The Old Bell" were particularly applauded...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRIMSON PLAYGOER | 10/7/1920 | See Source »

Indirectly linked with these questions is a short essay, "A Literary Mania." Mr. Colby justly asserts that the appreciation of literature has been supplanted by the glibness of a catalogue, that we no longer read with enthusiasm or perception but merely with a pedantic consciousness of literary tendencies and influences. This too is the fault of the college. After a well phrased statement of this lamentable situation, Mr. Colby wisely withdraws. Perhaps at this point he became aware of certain difficulties which escaped Mr. Chapin's observation: that if we are to lift the colleges we must first lift...

Author: By Robert S. Hillyer ., | Title: ESSAYS, REVIEWS, AND POETRY GIVES ADVOCATE WIDE RANGE | 4/9/1920 | See Source »

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