The Advocate is planning to publish for the Fall a critical guide to literature courses offered for undergraduates.
Unlike the Crimson's Confi Guide, which purports to be based on a poll of students, the Advocate's guide will feature its staff members personal opinions on the professors and their courses.
It will be "an approach for students already concerned with literature," Thomas A. Stewart '70, Advocate president, said yesterday. He said that members of the Advocate, who are seriously interested in literature, would be good critics of English and related courses for other serious students.
The guide, covering 20 to 30 courses, will sell for less than one dollar. Although the Advocate has for the past five years been too poor to put out the four issues a year required by its constitution, Stewart said they "do not forsee any particular problems" financing the guide. The specific financial arrangements have not yet been decided.
Recommended Articles
-
Latest Advocate Called 'Obscene'The December issue of the Advocate is raising former members' ire as well as their contributions to the magazine's trust
-
THE CONFI GUIDETo the Editors of The Crimson: If I were considering taking a particular introductory course and if I read in
-
Confidential GuideConfi Guide polls for all fall term courses and for the fall terms of all full year courses can be
-
Faculty Is Frightened As 'Confi' ApproachesEvery Harvard teacher from the most senior Faculty member to the lowliest teaching fellow has been wearing a nervous mask
-
KITTREDGE ON FAVORITE THEME IN EMERSON TALKProfessor G. L. Kittredge '82, professor of English Literature in the University, will give at 4.30 this afternoon in Emerson
-
ON THE SHELFBack this fall with new makeup and a crop of good stories and poems, the Harvard Advocate has got off