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The Illustrated radiates timeliness in its current number more than ever before, and forcibly substantiates the fact that it is the live and fast instrument for presenting pictorially the news of the minute at the University. Even the cover, showing a winter scene in the Yard with the Widener Memorial Library for the background, might have been photographed only yesterday afternoon.
Predominant in the group of news-and-picture articles is the essay that Professor Muensterberg contributed to the Illustrated a short time before his death. It analyzes the records of the men who were in his psychology class last spring and drags forward the belief of the psychologist that Harvard undergraduates do not make full use of their own mental attainments. It is remarkable that one man should have won a rating of 100 per cent. in Dr. Muensterberg's test, but it is likewise remarkable that so many of the other students fell far below that grade in the tests. A recitation of the dozen different experiments that were tried on the psychology class is interesting.
In the photographic phase, the Illustrated carries pictures of the principals in the Dramatic Club's show, the Senior Class Marshals, the new Farnsworth Room at the Widener Memorial Library and Captain Wheeler of the University football team. And there is also present the "dope" on the hockey season. The complete number is quite creditable and can fit into Volume XVIII of the Illustrated with full rights. N. R. O'HARA 2G.
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