Word: bulletin
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Bulletin is not in a praising mood. As an "elder brother", born by some monstrosity of nature twenty-five years after the stripling it sets out to chastise, (but we have forgotten, the child is of course, father of the man), it chides the CRIMSON for its "firecracker brand of undergraduate journalism...
...elder brother, living under the same roof (and this is no mere metaphor) the Bulletin ventures to suggest an abatement in the firecracker brand of undergraduate journalism. The CRIMSON has a good tradition to maintain, a tradition which contains no yellow streak. It is the dally organ, not of its editors alone, but of the entire membership of the University. These editors abide their little hour and go their way, but the tradition of the paper ought to be in their hands a trust. --Alumni Bulletin...
...Harvard CRIMSON" says the Alumni Bulletin editorially" "has been a pretty well-behaved publication, as undergraduate journals go". All small favors, of course, are gratefully received and such praise is particularly welcomed from as fastidious a critic as the Bulletin...
...whether it be an elder or a younger brother the Bulletin is serious in its criticism and as such deserves a respectful hearing. The CRIMSON, so runs its argument, is in a position of public office. And "public office is a public trust". With this conception of its own position the CRIMSON is in hearty accord. It agrees with the Bulletin that undergraduate editors "have their day and cease to be" and must hand on their trust untarnished and, if possible, brighter than ever. Difference of opinion develops not as to the end but as to the means...
...manner all the news of the University, and of expressing and guiding the opinion of the undergraduate body. There is a great difference between a newspaper and a gazette--possibly the difference between perpetual youth and premature age. And the CRIMSON, preferring the former, refuses to be a mere bulletin...