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...accord with the sentiment of the Board that that cartoon was removed. The Advocate knows that the editors of the Harvard Magazine have their own, well-defined policy, and it does not recognize the right of anyone to interfere with that policy. The new magazine represents a wide stratum of public literary taste. The editors of it honestly believe in their conception of literature, as was shown by the difficulty with which they were retired from the Advocate Board last year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 3/11/1919 | See Source »

...intercollegiate sport in a capacity more or less critical, gratuitously to offer opinions outside his own medium of publicity concerning the conduct of athletic affairs at one institution or another, yet the question of resident coaches as opposed to the instructor engaged merely for the season has assumed a wide-spread importance which may be regarded as justifying the CRIMSON--or whatever university daily, for that matter,--in opening wide doors and windows for the admission of whatever light may come from any source or quarter...

Author: By Lawrence Perry, | Title: FAVORS EXPERT COACHES | 3/8/1919 | See Source »

...Nations is denounced as advocacy of war and hostility to peace. Nothing could be more dangerous than this. The whole subject is one of such vast importance and hostility to peace. Nothing could be more dangerous than this. The whole subject is one of such vast importance and so wide spread in its ramifications that it should not be determined by a mere reiterations of slogans and cries. It is a subject which calls for very deep consideration and for logical thought. Theoretically, we all favor peace. We should be glad if the curse of war could be swept from...

Author: By Louis ARTHUR Coolidge, | Title: "DRAFT OF LEAGUE OF NATIONS HASTILY THROWN TOGETHER" | 3/7/1919 | See Source »

...Here was certainly a full and varied life, responsive to many personal moods and many tides of public feeling. Lowell drew intellectual stimulus from enormously wide reading in classical and modern literatures. Puritanically earnest by inheritance, he seems also to have inherited a strain of levity which he could not always control, and, through his mother's family, a dash of mysticism sometimes resembling second sight. His physical and mental powers were not always in the happiest mutual adjustment: he became easily the prey of moods and fancies, and knew the alternations from wild gaiety of spirits to black despair...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "WIT, HUMOR, WISDOM" MARK WORK OF JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL | 2/21/1919 | See Source »

...Junior Classes will prevent, if adopted, a repetition of the negligence which marked those elections this year. It is based upon a recognition of the undergraduate's procrastination. There must be some leader to mark the pace. The ineligibility of the former officers made them impartial nominators while their wide acquaintance tends to create confidence in their choice. It would give a candidate too great an advantage if but one were proposed, while if the former officers named three, the class would be robbed of a stimulus for nominating men by petition since three candidates are the required number...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: STIMULATING NOMINATIONS | 2/20/1919 | See Source »

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