Word: searches
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...would seem from recent events that the Lampoon is in search of new publics to conquer. Not content with having just captured a page in one of the soberest of weekly papers and with occasionally drawing blood from the Crimson, its editors have taken a prominent place in the current number of the Advocate. Mr. Mechem has written a comedy which is good enough to make us forget most of the time the absurdity of the situation. Mr. Moise has called this satire "In Memoriam." The title explains itself as we read how la Comtesse du Porc-Mouton presented...
...Lecture Committee" has recently been formed at the Harvard Club of Boston to arrange informal lectures for members of the club. Professor Hanus of the Department of Education here, will be the first speaker. He will, talk on "The Search for Standards in Education" this evening at 8.30 o'clock. Provision has been made for the discussion of topics or questions suggested by members of the club. The wide activity of Professor Hanus not only in pedagogical circles but in the work of public education, should guarantee an interesting talk. Guests accompanied by members are welcome at these meetings...
...what a man must do afterward to succeed in life. He must stand fast, work hard, learn his lessons even though they seem wearisome. In a word, football is like life and life is like football. It isn't easy sailing, and success in either is like the search for the four-leaf clover-a lesson in faith, hope, strength and hard work...
...present intention to keep no record of their presence or absence. The board will be similar to that now furnished at Memorial Hall, and will cost approximately $5 a week. There will be no fixed places at table, and thus men will be unrestricted in their search for congenial companions...
...imagination and force, but as sometimes happens in undergraduate verse, they are not all crystal clear. Mr. Nathan's "Death", after three or four readings conveys a certain sense of vastness but very little more; Mr. Cummings's "Sonnets", too, full of fancy as they are, defy a close search for the meaning. "Sas Agapo", by Mr. Reinhard, is clear enough, on the other hand, but a little thin. The best poem in the number is Mr. Thayer's "Portrait", full of imagination and music, but better yet, full of a real tenderness and awe that make one forget...