Word: publishes
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...idea of publishing yearly a list of all undergraduates with their comparative scholastic ratings was first conceived in the fall of 1921 as result of a recommendation of the Scholastic Committee of the Student Council to publish the grades of all students as an incentive to higher scholarship. This was found to be impractical and the College devised the present system of dividing all promoted students into six groups according to the average of the grades attained Men who completed their requirements for a Bachelor's degree and men who missed their final examinations are not included in the percentages...
...have received exclusive permission to publish in serial form...
There were no magazines in Florence in the early 16th Century; no yellow-faced Florentine Hearst issued those memoirs in his Sunday supplements, illustrated with pastels of perverted prelates and indiscrete marchesas "in the Italian manner". It remained for The Famous Story Magazine to publish the last three lines of that announcement last week in its first issue...
...cannot forbear protesting the absurd criticism of TIME which you saw fit to publish in LETTERS, Aug. 31 issue - from which circumstance it derives its only claim for consideration. Never did I see a more inane, vacuous assertion than that the editing of TIME "is purely a mechanical operation requiring no literary ability." For it seems to me that more cleverness, more brains, go into the composition of a single issue of TIME than any other journal I know. It's so bright, for one thing, that I have definitely decided to cancel my subscription to "our leading humorous...
...which she could not remember? The public soon found it out. Her name was Fraud, Charlatanism, Trickery, Guile, Deceit. She, one Alma Sioux Scarberry, employee of the New York Daily Mirror (Hearst), had been "planted" to play her role as a publicity stunt. The Daily Mirror was about to publish a serial novel by Elinor Glyn relating the adventures of the vanished British woman, Miss Levy. Hence the carefully arranged passport pictures, the initials, the English money, in the fraud's vanity-case. Hence the dastardly clever reference to Elinor Glyn. Next day the Mirror publicly gloated over the success...