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...community whatever his business or profession. Such a statement, from a man who has been notably successful in serving the public, is of great value to all those who are wondering how they can combine their own work with that of the community in which they are to live. The two stories are short and not remarkable; the comedy is rather puerile, and the study in resurrection unconvincing. Of the verse, Mr. Seeger's translation from the Inferno is in many ways a remarkable production; the language is simple and dignified, and the verse is smooth, the dangers attending...

Author: By H. A. Bellows., | Title: Monthly Reviewed by Mr. Bellows | 3/8/1910 | See Source »

...especially charming were it not for the "paradisal snow." Mr. Gray's "Utopia" is not an improvement on Shakspere. The stories are rather slight sketches than stories. "His Valley" by H. B. Wehle is not effective because the one character lacks the terse expression that would make his story live. The descriptions--not by the old prospector--are overdrawn. The reader balks a little at the "clear scarlet sky" as other readers protested at Coleridge's sky with its "peculiar tint of yellow green." H. K. Moderwell's "By Night" has a vigor that makes one wish for more...

Author: By W. R. Castle., | Title: Review of Advocate by Dean Castle | 3/7/1910 | See Source »

...Cambridge and Harvard together so long that it would be a pity to have the ties broken. We hope and believe that the troublesome question of taxation may be settled once for all to the satisfaction of both the city and the University, and that they will continue to live together in complete amity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TAXING COLLEGE PROPERTY | 3/3/1910 | See Source »

...years past and with the violent protests of the undergraduates un-heeded, the Corporation has continued to authorize the Bursar to give preference in the allotment of rooms in Hollis and Stoughton to double applications for single rooms. Using a single room for living and sleeping is distinctly unpleasant and not infrequently unhealthy. Granted that there were room for two beds, desks, bureaus, book-cases, tables, and the like, in these rooms, which there is not, it is still asking too much to expect one tired man to lie awake while his room-mate pounds his typewriter or entertains...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REARRANGEMENT OF ROOMS IN HOLLIS AND STOUGHTON. | 2/23/1910 | See Source »

...Stoughton are occupied by one man only, so that the number accommodated will by no means be cut in half; and as to the expense, men need not apply for two rooms as a double suite unless they so desire. This long-sought privilege will enable men to live with greatly increased comfort, and should prove a tremendous boon to the whole Senior dormitory system...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REARRANGEMENT OF ROOMS IN HOLLIS AND STOUGHTON. | 2/23/1910 | See Source »