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WORK OF UNIVERSITY PRESS IS SUMMARIZED

Four Books Now Being Printed to Appear in Spring--Complete List of Volumes Given

Joseph Vincent Fuller '14: Bismarck's Diplomacy at its Zenith. Based on the latest German official publications, this study covers the years 1886 and 1887, a crucial period in modern European history.

Albert Andrew Howard and Carl Newell Jackson: Index Verborum C. Svetoni Tranqvilli. An index to the works of Suetonius, a Latin writer of the second century.

Mark Antony DeWolfe Howe '87: Memoirs of the Harvard Dead in the War Against Germany, Volume 3. Biographies of the Harvard men who fell in the Great War between April 7 and August 4, 1918.

Abbott Lawrence Lowell '77: Public Opinion in War and Peace. A penetrating analysis of modern society by the President of Harvard University.

Carl Gordon Cutler and Stephen Coburn Pepper '13: Modern Color. An account of a method of painting originated by Mr. Cutler and in successful use by a number of American artists.

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Octavius Thorndike Howe '73: Argonauts of 49. A thrilling account of the Companies of Massachusetts gold-seekers who went round the Horn seventy-five years ago; Illustrated with pictures of old sailing vessels.

George Saltonstall Mumford '87: Twenty Harvard Crews. An account, by an old Harvard oarsman, of the Harvard Crews between 1882 and 1901, with many illustrations and sidelights on the art of rowing in general:

Emile Legouis: Wordsworth in a New Light. A re-examination of the great poet's character and work in the light of recent discoveries regarding his youthful days in France.

The Press is now printing four books which will appear in the following order this spring.

Saul Drucker and Morris B. Hexter: Children Astray. A study of cases of juvenile delinquency successfully handled in an Orphanage. Introduction by Richard C. Cabot '89.

Percy H. Houston G. '05.: Dr. Johnson, a Study in 18th Century Humanism. Dr. Johnson's life and work studied from an unusual point of view.

S. F. Batchelder '93; Bits of Harvard History. Entertaining essays on old days and old ways at Harvard College profusely illustrated.

Edward D. Snyder G. '11: The Celtic Revival in English Literature 1760-1800. A study of a movement among eighteenth-century English men of letters who were united by a common desire to infuse into English poetry the mythology, the history, and the literary treasures of the ancient Celts

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