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HARVARD MAGAZINES PREPARE TO KEEP TO PRESENT SCHEDULES

Defunct Guardian Style to Appear in Revised Advocate

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

This is the first in a series of articles in which the outlook, bright or sombre, for the College's numerous extra-curricular activities will be reviewed.

Most men come in contact with those extra-curricular activities which depend upon the entire student body for support, so it is natural that the most interest should be shown in the future plans of these organizations.

With prominent institutions such as the Yale Daily News collapsing in other colleges, it would seem as if all non-essential activities were doomed, but this conclusion proves to be inaccurate.

In the field of Crimson publication, only the Guardian has fallen, and others are determined to continue active, if altered, operations. The Advocate, formerly a purely literary publication, has decided to adopt a vigorous editorial policy, and to print analytic work, thereby continuing the services once performed by the Guardian.

Voluntary Contributions Needed

Size and form are to remain the same for the Advocate and quality will depend, as in the past, upon the grade of work obtained from English composition courses and voluntary contributions. The changing nature of undergraduate personnel will directly affect the style of the magazine, but the continued listing of several creative writing courses suggests a fairly steady supply of articles.

The Lampoon, humorous magazine whose production is actually handled by a small group of wits, will not feel the man-power shortage so acutely, and a competition held early in the summer term is expected to lure enough new funsters to maintain publication throughout the summer. The chief need is for cartoonists, and special inducement may be offered to jokers talented in this field.

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