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A few years ago business schools and schools of journalism were unheard of in American universities. Today such schools are being continually added to institutions of learning all over the country. That there is a large place for the School of Business Administration in Harvard has already been demonstrated, and...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A COURSE IN JOURNALISM. | 6/19/1911 | See Source »

"The Broken Mirror," last of a series of stories of Mme. Saumon's pension on Eliot street, is too obvious in plot and only near-English in style. The tone suggested by the first line, "Dulling their background like two pearls in a cabbage patch," is fortunately not maintained throughout...

Author: By E. E. Hunt ., | Title: Review of June Number of Monthly | 6/17/1911 | See Source »

Mr. Cronyn's "Dionysos Eleutherios" is stirring verse of high order. The lilt and the changing mood of the poem are admirable. If the reviewer may be permitted to carp, he would add merely that the moral seems a bit forced and that perhaps no specific moral at all would...

Author: By E. E. Hunt ., | Title: Review of June Number of Monthly | 6/17/1911 | See Source »

The value of the Living Room lectures cannot be overestimated. Their success next year depends in large measure upon the forehanded efforts that the officers make this spring toward getting the right men to say that they will speak. Perhaps it may be difficult to get definite replies as yet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MORE UNION LECTURES. | 6/12/1911 | See Source »

Such a course, taking up the history of the movement, explaining its various forms, and criticizing the remedies which it proposes for present day problems, should be able to transform the great amount of loose talk on the subject, current among undergraduates whose enthusiasm is perhaps greater than their information...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A COURSE ON SOCIALISM. | 6/10/1911 | See Source »