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Three Harvard magazines that produced a combined total of only four issues last year will soon resuing regular publication, and a new fine are review will join them this spring.
Claiming to have solved crippling financial problems, the three magazines are back in the black.
The Advocate, the country's oldest college literary magazine, is listed as a quarterly but could only publish three issues last year. The third was a special summer issue late in May. However, business manager Richard Rubin '67 said this week that the Advocate will produce four issues before May this year.
The last issue of the Gargoyle was a hand-out at last year's freshman registration. The humor magazine will publish at least one issue this year, according to editor David Shakow '67.
Cambridge 23 a magazine produced by Harvard Yearbook Publications, has not been seen since the spring of 1964, but year book president Ben Dunham '67 says that the first of this year's three issues will be out in two weeks.
Arts Magazine
Peter B. Brooks '67 is organizing a fine arts magazine to be called the Harvard Art Review. The publication, will concentrate on Greater Boston art news including features on private collections and previews of working artists. Brooks hopes to publish three issues a year, the first next spring.
Brooks believes the first issue will cost $600 to produce. One-third of this amount may come from Fogg Museum funds pledged by Fogg director John Coolidge. The magazine already has enough money to publish its first issue Brooks said. He hopes to secure further financial support from several Boston museums.
If the Art Review still needs money Brooks plans to raise funds by showing rare Charlie Chaplin movies from a friend's private collection.
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