Word: answering
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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This editorial further states that the CRIMSON's sole reason for refusing to print the answer to its attack on the Freshmen was that the writer of that answer protested in "an insulting note" against their failure to print...
...challenge the CRIMSON to print at this late date either of the two communications from graduates regarding the Advocate, which we know that it has suppressed; or the answer to its recent attack on the Freshmen; or, beter, all three, to prove its statement that the communications which were not published "were either anonymous, or written in a childishly flippant and comic-supplement style." The undergraduate body should know fully whether or not such letters are "signed and more than persiflage." And the undergraduate body is entitled to know the truth about the Advocate affair, even after the long...
...were judged inadequate in that they were either anonymous, or written in a childishly flippant and comic-supplement style. Where a serious letter, keeping within the bounds of parliamentary decency was concerned, the CRIMSON has never refused to print the writer's statements, except in one case. Here an answer to this communication on the Freshman editorial was followed by an insulting note, and the original letter was, therefore, not published. In this instance the CRIMSON may not have followed the wisest policy; if so, it, regrets its decision, but one single instance does not furnish enough proof to substantiate...
...answer Dr.--'s question very easily,' said the bland, grave young man. 'There's a new President...
...tranquil assurance of the answer had an effect such as I hardly ever knew produced by the most eloquent sentences I ever heard uttered...