Word: editor
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...days ago while kicking around under the sanctum desk for the subject of an editorial, the waste-basket was accidentally overturned. The exchange editor reached over among the litter and drew out some MSS. which, after some consideration and pleading on his part, we have decided to present to the public. Communications were very prevalent of course. The first one we happened to pick out read as follows...
...under the editorial charge of Dr. Murray, and he has thirty able scholars as assistants. Beside these, more than one thousand readers in the English speaking world have assisted in gathering quotations from every important book in the language. Prof. March of Lafayette College has been the American editor. An exceedingly interesting history can some day be written of this great enterprise-the greatest perhaps of its kind the world has ever seen. It is hoped that a first part can be issued during the present year...
This is a Bad man. Why is this a Bad man? He is a College student, and the Good Editor of the Wise Paper says that all College students are Bad Men. Name some of the attributes of College students. College students smoke Cigarettes and they Rush a great deal, and Haze one another, and, oh! some of them play Poker. But only the very Worst play Poker. So this must be a Yale man. Go away, you Bold...
...following-named gentlemen will constitute the editorial board of the Yale News for the ensuing year: Charles Winslow Burpee, '83; William Warren Calhoun, 83; Laurent Clerc Deming, '83; Thomas Shephard Southworth, '83; Horatio Odell Stone, '83, financial editor; Albert William Robert, '83, S. S. S.; Julius Tyler Andrews Doolittle, '84; James William Oakford, '84; William Brainard Coit...
...Post came out yesterday morning with a scathing editorial on "Uncivilized Collegiates." We quote the following as a sample of the Post editor's views on the subject: "In the more high-toned current items of crime the college student occupies a conspicuous place, and there are many pranks of his that deserve to come under this head which are called by a milder name, because a college student is supposed to be incapable of crime - he merely breaks the laws." Again he says that a tendency to lawlessness has been observed at Harvard, Yale, etc., within a very recent...