Word: papers
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...CRIMSON welcomes the former editors of the Illustrated to its board and feels sure that the united board will be able to offer the College a paper worthy of being its most representative organ...
...hope to see. Also, the grandiose statement that, in 316 editorials, three out of four expressed "decided and unqualified opinions," does not affect the vacillation and vacuity of the other twenty-five percent. I should like, for instance, fair play and frank speech on the words "a six-column paper would need as much support from the banks of Boston as the Magazine now receives from a certain type of 'instructor.'" In short, if the CRIMSON keeps on digging its own pit as rapidly as it has in such editorials as this reply, sooner of later the fall is bound...
...into the CRIMSON, as announced elsewhere in this issue, cannot but have a very far-reaching influence. The CRIMSON has felt that it has reached a stage where it is capable of putting out an illustrated supplement every other week throughout the College year. The union of the two papers makes possible the fulfilment of the CRIMSON'S hopes with the aid of the Illustrated's editors, whose experience will be a valuable asset in issuing the new pictorial. The benefits will be mutual, for, though the Illustrated will go out of business as such, its place will be filled...
...simple truth is that it is not a representative Harvard paper." Representative of what, we ask.--And as an example of this "unrepresentative short-coming," the editors of the Magazine quote carelessness in cutting and proof-reading as though they believed that accuracy typified Harvard undergraduates. The CRIMSON has not previously been informed that it was so unrepresentative that the College is about to repudiate it and foster a new daily, which fact the Harvard Magazine has taken upon itself to declare, representing as it does the best of undergraduate thought and desires...
...regard to the "Harvard Daily," whose genesis the Magazine heralds with such obvious joy, the CRIMSON can only welcome it with misgivings. Knowing as it does the competition which a Harvard daily must meet at the hands of the Boston papers, the limitations necessarily imposed by the Faculty, and the financial difficulties which even an established paper must face, the CRIMSON feels that a "six-column" paper would need as much support from the banks of Boston as the Magazine now receives from a certain type of "instructor." The CRIMSON has been developed by such editors as George S. Mandell...