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...life,--but to a hesitating Senior it may prove invaluable. More than a third of the Advocate is written by members of the Faculty. If the paper is to follow the CRIMSON in pressing the Faculty into service, may it not well remember that in college journalism, what people want is youth, with all its mistakes and all its glory; and that not many people recognize the need of a middle-aged Advocate...

Author: By L. B. R. briggs., | Title: Federation Number of the Advocate | 5/29/1909 | See Source »

...affair and the only chance of its being so this year is that the members of 1909 are too uninterested and lax to go. It seems to me that this is a great mistake and a great pity; for the committee have done everything to make it attractive and want the whole class to be together at the most amusing entertainment of the Senior year. F. H. BURR...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications | 5/26/1909 | See Source »

...Illustrated Magazine for April is a Gymnasium number. An appeal is sounded--a very earnest and vigorous appeal: "If Harvard undergraduates will show that they want a new gymnasium, and are willing to help provide one, the graduates will to the larger rest....Let us drive the key-bolt home while it is sparkling fire!" This is the spirit of the appeal and it is addressed primarily to the undergraduate body. Will it meet with a response? Will it accomplish its purpose...

Author: By E. N. Perbin ., | Title: Review of April Illustrated. | 4/5/1909 | See Source »

...lawyer is trained to deal with the unscrupulous, and therefore he himself must be scrupulous. To be scrupulous means a good reputation and a good reputation in the law often spells success. The capitalists do not want men like themselves to take charge of their cases, but men whom they can trust, and they are willing to pay well for this sort of talent, hence the reason why a lawyer should have a good reputation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE LAW AS A PROFESSION | 4/3/1909 | See Source »

There is a good deal of feeling around College that basketball should be abolished as an intercollegiate sport at Harvard, because some men claim that they think the game, as it is played today, is bad. But these same men say that intercollegiate basketball should be allowed. What I want to know is, what the difference might be between the game as played between two colleges and the game as played between two classes? In my opinion if the game is dropped as an intercollegiate sport, the Athletic Committee should at least be consistent and abolish it entirely...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Basketball as a Sport. | 3/20/1909 | See Source »