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Mr. Nelson's story is the longest, and perhaps the best written, of the prose specimens, but it is a little bit irritating: it is a kind of Phillips Brooks House "ad," based on the assumption that anything labelled "Service," with a capital "S," is "real" and "vital." Even the...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: "Advocate is Doing its Job" | 2/26/1916 | See Source »

Mr. Leffingwell is frankly imitative, but he chooses an admirable model--J. M. Vetteredia. Some of his descriptions seem extravagant--"amber arms," for instance--but on the whole his language and his metre are sound, and one feels that he has more of "the makings" than some of his more...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: "Advocate is Doing its Job" | 2/26/1916 | See Source »

A new minor (perhaps it may soon be major) sport was welcomed into the University last night by the thousand students who packed the Living Room of the Union. The promotion of any addition to our already wide field of extra-curriculum activities requires both perseverance and a careful sizing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE NEW MINOR SPORT. | 2/26/1916 | See Source »

Columbia has made public no make-up of her crew, but over 100 candidates have started practice under a new system in which every man who keeps in regular training will be given a seat in some crew, perhaps made up by classes or dormitories in the spring. In order...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COLLEGE CREWS PREPARING FOR ANNUAL SPRING RACES | 2/24/1916 | See Source »

The new 1918 business competition offers advantages to the candidate that it would be difficult to duplicate in any other college activity. Contact with big-business interests in Boston and New York is constant by necessity. There is also much valuable knowledge of the financing and distribution of the publication...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OPEN PLACES ON CRIMSON BOARD | 2/23/1916 | See Source »