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Little has happened in the University that the staff photographers of the Illustrated didn't "catch." The current number, dated October 22 and appearing on time, is jammed with timely photographs. From the bond advertisement on the front cover to the patent medicine boost on the back, there are words and pictures for all constant subscribers to think over and look over seriously.
It would be an incomplete compliment to call the Illustrated's photographers Arguses. They have more than the giant's quota of one hundred eyes when it is incumbent on them to take a photograph. They have a nice journalistic sense in picking out the meat of the thing to be photographed; they see everything and see it discriminately. Thus do the pictures in "Harvard's most progressive paper" become timely.
It is to be assumed the Illustrated is glad Major Flynn remains with the R. O. T. C. It gives the Major the front page for a picture, the editorial page for a bouquet and the only other page of prose for an interview. The editorial is a deft piece of work. It tells Major Flynn how glad, we are that he's here in a quaint but poignant fashion.
As usual, the sporting pictures are clear and comprehensive. The camera men overlooked no bets, and so they "caught" the football game in the Stadium, the Radio and Freshman teams, the crew and the baseball team. Besides all of which there are more non-sporting pictures. The Bromo Seltzer advertisement on the back cover is therefore futile. Nobody is going to get a headache reading the current Illustrated. N. R. O'HARA, 3G.
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