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Harvard's only self-styled magazine with a bias the Student Union's "Progressive" in out today, oozing well-written bias from every page...

Author: By Allan D. Ecker, | Title: LATEST "PROGRESSIVE" DEALS CHIEFLY WITH U. S. DEFENSE | 9/24/1940 | See Source »

...lived for six years in Poland and escaped last September under the wings of German bombers. She has written her book for her two children to inform them of the society into which they were born and which has now been ruined. It is an honest and unobtrusively well-written story, full of unaccented human truth. The wildness and gloom of her husband's country oppressed her; the rigid social etiquette and slack business habits of his friends made her smile, the rituals of boar hunting on his 10,000-acre estate both thrilled and repelled her; his family...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poland and Christendom | 6/10/1940 | See Source »

...well-written appraisal of the recently exposed "Yankee American Action" by Joseph P. Lyford '41 makes a fine lead-off article, while G. Robert Stange's Convention Commentary provides a too-long delayed analysis of the atmosphere that prevailed at the ASU Madison convention. Both are thoroughly interesting treatments of significant trends in American thought...

Author: By Richard D. Edwards ., | Title: Improved 'Progressive' Shows New Method and Development | 2/29/1940 | See Source »

Last week there was thunder on the right. Mr. Glenn Frank released his long-germinating Republican battle-chart for the scrutiny and approval of good anti-New Dealers everywhere. Like all well-written platforms, it makes pleasant reading, paints an inspiring Utopia, but makes little sense without an analysis of the economic and social skeleton that supports it. Under such a probe, Mr. Frank's essay shows up as something far different from the trumpet call to "the good life" that it purports...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRANKLY SPEAKING | 2/26/1940 | See Source »

...well-written story of minor moment, laid at Harvard and in Mexico (where Wells Lewis has spent the last few summers), They Still Say No concerns the sex life of a Harvard undergraduate. Hero is a tall, dapper, literary innocent named Crane Stewart. Engaged to a cautious girl named Julia, Crane harkens to the lusty bad advice of his pal Jeff, frightens Julia away in a blundering attempt at seduction. At a Park Avenue party, with a girl who is willing, luck is again against him. That summer he goes to Mexico to visit his uncle, falls in love with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Much Ado About Adolescence | 4/24/1939 | See Source »

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