Word: paged
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...editor to the races, the obituary in the first edition is apt to be brief. And so it fell out in the death of Thomas Mott Osborne, famed warden of Sing Sing, whose demise the Boston Herald covered last week. The notice- a two-inch filler on the front page -was headlined simply...
Readers of the Boston Herald were puzzled at first to know what to make of the subhead but, schooled by long practice to deal with such typographical vagaries, they quickly saw that the line of small type belonged under a headline farther down the page...
More than four hundred college papers are published in America. Almost every student body supports one, from the tiny four page weekly of the rural college to the complete imitation metropolitan daily in the big university. The Daily Illinois, University of Illinois, for instance, serves a community of 30,000 as the only morning paper and is printed in a university-owned plant valued at $100,000. These papers from laboratories for countless schools of journalism and furnish occupation for scores of students...
...more good drawing in the body of the paper. As a rule there is not, though inevitably the illustrations have a certain flair. There are one or two bad spots, this time, especially the various essays at horses, but on the whole the drawings seem fairly creditable. The page by Wood and C. F. F. is perhaps the most finished thing in the number, though smacking almost too much of the professional sophisticate...
Usually we take delight in the Inkling page, but this time we felt rather disappointed. The authors of the longer prose pieces, for their part, have mostly directed their efforts at the University, an excellent thing, for supposedly they know it well. And after all, a place filled with absent-minded professors and collegiate sheiks are distinctly strained, but the Tribute to a Passing Profile by an Artist Who Could Draw Only Full Faces is a pleasing fancy...