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...those contemplating any sort of business connection after college there is no better training than that which they get as candidates, and if successful, as business editors of the CRIMSON. This is one of the few competitions in College combining a direct business training with the affairs of the particular competition. The candidate is daily in contact with the business men of Boston. His chief work is securing advertising, both national and local...
...amalgamation of the best features of the Hasty Pudding and Pi Eta shows into one grand hilarious musical revue, which shall be representative of Harvard's best. But why stop Here? We might include the 47 Workshop--for a triangle certainluy needs a third side--to lend a sort of "high-brow" atmosphere to the under-taking. And the services of the Glee Club should be enlished for the mean's chorus, and the Radcliffe Choral Society could be called on for the chorus and ballet girls. From this it is but a short step to the alliance of Radcliffe...
...cover that Mrs. Richards "has gathered about two hundred poems from the foremost poets of today, making her selection not only on the ground of literary excellence, but also for the message of joy, faith and promise that each poem carries." Probably there is a place for this sort of thing; we are acquainted with several middling-to-elderly ladies to whom it is the breath of life--at intervals. But personally we distrust poetry with an avowed message. Experience has taught us that all too often it forgets to be poetry at all, while the deepest, truest, clearest message...
...displays unusual talent. The Spirit of the Ouijaboard, Miss Helenka Adamowska, always charms; her acting in this difficult role is noteworthy. All of the principals have real voices for both the lines and the lyrics, a quality which is often found lacking in the usual amateur show of this sort...
...Fiushing magistrate who recently sentenced a boy in the juvenile court to "three months reading in the Public Library" has established an exceedingly valuable precedent. The praise of books has been sung in every age, and today, when even the smallest hamlet nearly always possesses some sort of public reading-room, it is easy to believe that this institution is becoming the corner-stone of American progress. Yet the association of the library with the despised text-book still discourages the schoolboy from spending an hour with a favorite volume. And it is here that the power of the court...