Word: journalism
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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...much different from those nearer home. Complaints, wise suggestions in matters of college government and undergraduate conduct, sarcasm, good and bad taste, mighty phillipics, extravagant "swipes," are as prevalent there as here. There seems to be, however, a tendency towards meddling with politics, national or local. The little journal swells out enormously, and disagrees most decidedly with a recent appointment at Washington, or thinks that the city had better "begin work on the grading" of such and such a street as soon as possible. The current number contains its Thanksgiving editorial, and the reader almost sees the enthusiastic editor devouring...
...takes some time for us to get west again. But once there, we are doomed to another sudden return. A western journal tells us, "Johnson has the heart disease." Home again! Indeed this is too much. The heart disease has gone west. Suffering students of the west, we give you our sympathy...
...following papers will be on file in the Harvard Reading Room: dailies, Boston Advertiser, Post, Transcript, N. Y. Times, Tribune, Springfield Republican. Weeklies, Philadelphia Times, Cincinnatti Gazette, Chicago Inter-Ocean, Louisville Courier Journal, New Orleans Picayune, Atlanta Constitution, Burlington Hawkeye, Texas Siftings, San Francisco Bulletin and Argonaut, The Beacon, Youth's Companion, Spirit of the Times, Turf, Field and Farm, N. Y. Sportsman, N. Y. Clipper, Harper's Weekly, The Nation, Frank Leslie's Illustrated, Illustrated London News, English Illustrated Magazine, Pall Mall Budget, London Times, Punch, Puck, Judge and Life. College papers, Yale News and Lit., Amherst Student, Princetonian...
EDITORS DAILY CRIMSON. - If the "Member of English 2" who maintains that there is only one correct method of spelling Shakespear's name, will consult the Saturday Review for Oct. 21, he will find that, in a criticism of a Shakespeare Concordance by Mr. Davenport Adams, that journal, which is certainly an authority, not only spells the name "Shakspeare," but further remarks: "Mr. Adams gives a practical illustration of the license now given to cultivated persons to spell Shakspeare in whatever way they like, by adopting one style on the title page and another on the text." From this...
...issue contain the initiatory menace of the committee. "Seniors are urged to sit for their photographs now, in order to avoid a rush in the spring." (The italics are our own). We wish to state frankly that we felt some hesitancy in admitting these revolutionary words to our journal. We felt that our reputation was at stake, for did we not barely a month since, denounce vigorously the disgraceful fray in which the two classes forming the substrata of the college participated? Yet we yielded, for we knew that nothing but the fear of severe bodily injury could ever induce...