Word: published
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Thomas J. O'Toole '42 was elected president of the Harvard Guardian yesterday and will assume his duties immediately. Jack E. Bronston '42 was selected editor-in-chief and Malcolm J. Rowe '42 business manager at the same meeting of the board of the magazine. The new officers will publish the first issue of the new year, but meanwhile an edition, already on the presses, will appear...
Kierkegaard's literary method was to invent characters, let them work out their ways of life, publish their "diaries" and "memoirs." Stages on Life's Way gleams brilliantly as character after character cuts a new facet on that indestructible gem, love between man & woman. Part I is a memoir of a wine-sodden banquet where a gay seducer, a fashion stylist, a cynic, etc. discourse on follies of woman and love. Theirs is life's esthetic stage. The ethical is explored in Part II by a happily married essayist. "Yes, it is true, no poet will ever...
Radcliffe's energies are taking on such proportions as to warrant forming a Social Service Committee there on a large scale. Meanwhile Harvard's Phillips Brooks House is to publish a report including comparative graphs of social service work being done by various colleges, and an article on the effect of P. B. H. work on juvenile delinquency in Boston...
...better than 100,000 subscribers (mostly New Englanders), from Bangor, Me. to Hong Kong. These ardent readers feared that the Old Farmer's 1940 issue would be its last. After the death of its fourth copyright owner, Bostonian Carroll J. Swan, in 1935, Little, Brown & Co. agreed to publish the almanac for five years. Its contract ended with the 148th edition. But this week the 149th was scheduled to come out bright & shiny as ever, kitchen-nail hole and all. Its new publisher: shrewd, shaggy Robb Sagendorph, Boston social registerite and Harvardman ('22), who publishes and edits...
Said Roosevelt: "Burroughs and the people at large don't know how many facts you have back of your stories. You must publish your facts." Result: Seton's Life Histories of Northern Animals and Lives of Game Animals (six volumes). He now murmurs: "Every scientific library in America today points to Seton's Lives as the last word and best authority on the subject." Seton also organized a woodcraft movement for lads under the petticoats of bird-loving Edward Bok's Ladies' Home Journal...