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Word: echoeing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...starting of other undergraduates publications--the Magneta (the name changed to CRIMSON after a successful campaign by the Advocate to restore crimson as the University color); the daily papers, the Echo, and the Herald (now the CRIMSON); the Monthly, and the Illustrated--led to keen competition. In 1882 a plan to consolidate the CRIMSON (then a fortnightly) and the Advocate was voted down in the Advocate board by one vote. Three or four years later, when both the Lampoon and Advocate were in financial straits, there was even some talk of combining these two publications...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVOCATE FIRST PUBLICATION TO PASS HALF-CENTURY MARK | 5/17/1916 | See Source »

...good model at least posed for Mr. Parson's "Scott." There is a reality about Mr. Kirby's "Sonnet" which is lacking in Mr. Sanger's "To --?". The "Winter Symphony" of Mr. Norris is another good work, and Mr. Benshimol is deadly serious with his "Cry and Echo." But perhaps the finest piece of verse in the number, and a poem of genuine merit, is Mr. Rogers' "Victory." The new board has very praiseworthy intentions, and it is on the way toward success...

Author: By A. PHILIP Mcmahon ., | Title: Current Advocate Praiseworthy | 3/3/1916 | See Source »

...George Eliot by 'Agatha.' Charles Reade's first draft of 'The Box Tunnel' is accompanied by two letters, expressing his appreciation of the fact that the Boston firm had 'taken up an author on your own judgment instead of waiting until sixteen old women had waited for some echo and echoed it and called it their verdict.' Emerson is represented by 'The Titmouse' and also by the loose and printer-thumbed sheets of an article hurriedly written in the hours following the arrival of the news of the Emancipation Proclamation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIELDS BEQUEST GAVE FAMOUS OLD WORKS TO TREASURE ROOM | 1/21/1916 | See Source »

...prose the number stands redeemed from commonplace by two mystical allegories of Paulding--not sufficiently dissimilar for one number--and Dos Pasasas's "Orientale," a clever, and entertaining story. Angels, however, is a singularly unsophisticated widow. Whittlesey in "The Old Order Changeth," seems an echo from last year, simply human and realistic--not of the order of The Smart Set. This order serves well for phantasy and the light touch, not for exposition, where, as in "The Movie and the Theatre" it proves neither delectable nor informative...

Author: By Percy W. Long ., | Title: Poetry in Monthly Excells | 11/6/1915 | See Source »

...ball rooms of the West, and the general exodus of students to their several homes, the University's purlieus, from Gore to Perkins, will become bleak, barren and bare. But before the members of the University disperse to the four winds, a cheerful note will be struck, that will echo in Cambridge for many...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A CHRISTMAS DINNER. | 12/15/1914 | See Source »

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