Word: print
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...thing that this unpleasant childish quarrel between Harvard and Princeton has not been allowed to cease. While official parties are not directly responsible for this newest utterance, it does show that they should exercise better supervision and keep such articles from print. From the outside, it seems that Princeton is being made he "goat" at the expense of Harvard. If there is a bit of truth in these clams, for the sake of decency, let it come out through the proper official spokesmen and thus settle the matter once and for all while it is fresh in the mind...
Someday, the Lampoon will cast its cold glare upon the University and in its Harvard Issue, print a series of sketches under the general title of "Impressions by One Who Has Never Been There." Undoubtedly, one of the subtitles will be "The Phillips Brooks House,"--and what a field for imagination! Here in one corner would be--but then, it is better not to suggest things to the Lampoon. And after all, the Phillips. Brooks House Association hasn't cause for too great fear. Even the most determined of its strangers remember the name in the haze of Student Council...
There are times in the course of journalistic events, which come seldom perhaps to a metropolitan newspaper, more often to an undergraduate daily such as the Crimson, when it becomes an unpleasant duty to print all the news. The appearance of the latest recriminating statement by a former Harvard football player, substantiating and adding further to the previous charges against Princeton football, is just one such instance. Again the plea for this latest and most unsavory outburst is "it will help clear the air". The Crimson firmly believes that the air has already become decidedly murky and will become increasingly...
...gain by a referee as proof that the game was clean. The record of practices inflicted during the game is the only record of a referee worthy of consideration. Until the entire matter is definitely closed it is the province of the newspaper, no less the Crimson, to print charges and rebuttals even when they betray a lack of intelligence and good taste...
...bluebook deserve a lot of sympathy. It really can't be much fun sitting at any desk for three hours in a row even with nothing but police duties for occupation. And the pleasure of watching other people work must pall after a while. Perhaps the college could print a cross word puzzle with each set of examinations to keep its representatives from restlessness, one that would take just a hundred and seventy-five minutes to solve so that there would still be time before the close of the examination for the traditional remark concerning the lateness of the hour...