Word: paper
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Dates: during 1880-1889
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There is a need of some means of publishing in permanent form "the best literary work of the college," and of having here at Harvard some paper which shall "represent within its pages the strongest and soberest under-graduate thought." This can be done in one of two ways; either by a new Literary Monthly, or by the "Advocate," which proposes to add to its size next year, and to do exactly, in quality and in quantity, the work which would be done by a Literary Monthly. Not more than one paper whose aim is to represent the best literary...
...matter on the page of a Monthly.) The size of the proposed Monthly would be, probably, 28 pages, ten numbers a year. If the "Advocate" can get 100 new subscribers next year, (in addition to those it already has), it will add sufficiently to the size of the paper, to be able to give just the same amount of space to literary articles and editorials, and to book reviews, as the proposed Monthly would, and at the same time, it will not encroach upon any of its present lighter matter, (except the item column). 44 pages per month of Monthly...
...Advocate which came out yesterday, announces that next fall eight columns will be added to the size of the paper, and that this additional space will be given up to literary articles...
...games in gaudy colors. Hardly had the first lot of these effective placards appeared when they began rapidly to disappear long before the game was played, much to the annoyance of the manager. In his affliction, he immediately sought the ear of the CRIMSON editor, and asked that worthy paper to reprimand the guilty students who must have committed the crime. Believing, as we said in the beginning, that none but the thoughtless freshman could be guilty, we hereby visit him with this our censure. The manager of the nine is perfectly willing that these placards should be taken away...
...lengthy intervals of a a week each, but every other day. The editors whose enterprise has brought about this change, and the college which is to receive the benefit of it are to be congratulated upon this new departure. A tri-weekly is a long step towards a daily paper, and at Princeton, cannot but be for the best interest of the college; for there the Nassau Literary Magazine affords a refuge in which the literary men of the college can find a convenient hiding place for their work...