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Monday will be the publication date for a radically new "Advocate", the first to be published under the recently revised policy, C. L. Sulzberger '34, president of the "Advocate", announced last night.
The feature article will be entitled, "Origins of the Hasty Pudding Theatre", and will be written by Theodore Chase '34, manager of the Hasty Pudding Club. The immediate cause of the article is the 1933 show "Step Lively", which will be produced at the Hasty Pudding Theatre on Wednesday. Sulzberger stated last night that every future issue of the "Advocate" will contain one story like this on some undergraduate activity.
A second part of the new policy will be the publication of one essay a month on some international question, in this case "Will War Destroy Civilization?" by Hoffman Nickerson '11. The winning Garrison Prize Poems for 1932-33, together with "Spring Songs", by C. L. Sulzberger '34, will also be included in this issue.
Other poems and stories listed in the table of contents are: "The Nursery", by J. C. Walcott '34; "Petit Jour", by R. S. Fitzgerald '34; "Forty Days and Forty Nights", by James Laughlin, IV '27; "Masks", by J. J. Slocum '36; "God's in His Heaven", part four of a novelette by M. L. Anshen '33; and "Goodbye", by W. P. Blanc '34.
Two other features will be: "Harvard in the Month's Magazines", a column of clippings relating to the University, and several reviews of recent books by former "Advocate" editors.
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