Word: written
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...journals. Its history is the early history of many a famous name, and there have been articles in its pages worthy of any journal in the world. To see the Monthly become again the unquestioned leader in the field of college verse, and arbiter of "the best literary work written by undergraduates in Harvard College" is an easily attainable desire, May the editors succeed...
...Sibley, and a number of dramatic criticisms. The editorials, if we exclude the fortnightly attack on the ringing of the seven o'clock bell, are unusually good, and the one entitled "An Opportunity" urges its suggestions so ably that one wishes that it might have been written in the days of the Advocate's past before some of the Harvard architecture had been called into its dreadful being. Mr. Sibley's paper outlines a method of spreading Harvard influence through the West without seeming unpleasantly officious. The play reviews are decidedly entertaining, but unequal, and in each case the reviewer...
...wins back his "widow". Miss Bates played delightfully. Some may have thought her a little heavy of tone and presence for such work; but with the singular technique that years of training under America's best coach have given her and the amusing comedy that Mr. Hopwood has written, she made last night at the Hollis a delight...
...game without having a signature card on file at the Athletic Office, the CRIMSON takes occasion to call attention to the new regulation in regard to the signature cards. This rule provides that no application will be considered unless the applicant has filed a card at the Athletic Office written out in his own hand. Notices to this effect have been sent to all those who did not comply with this rule in filing their Princeton applications. In order to avoid this necessity with the Dartmouth game applications all Harvard men who expect to apply for tickets this year...
...success of "The Product of the Mill" will depend on the effect of the children and their speeches. They are much better written than anyof the other dialogues in the piece. There is a pathetic humor running through them that may prove deeply touching. Even in the manuscript, the picture of suffering childhood in the mill is vivid. On these elements of humanness the popular appeal of the play must rest, much more than upon the somewhat commonplace story that it tells.--Boston Transcript