Word: reprint
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...either the first or second. Be it said, however, that it can hardly be easy to keep the standard of the paper always as high as it was in the first number of the year. Perhaps it is lingering pride in those first two numbers that makes the Lampoon reprint a joke that appeared two weeks...
...Poems of Philip Henry Savage," consisting of a reprint of the author's earlier work, with some posthumous verse contains much that will be read with pleasure and more that is of indifferent merit. A sympathetic yet admirably frank introduction by Daniel G. Mason '95 gives an attractive picture of Mr. Savage as a man, and puts the reader in an appreciative mood. An ever-present love of nature is evident in nearly all of the poems. Especially do the shorter verses catch and hold this quality, happily phrased and musical as they often are. At times, however, there...
...second, third and fourth pages contain communications from several Harvard undergraduates, and a reprint of an article on the trust question by G. E. Roberts, director of the U. S. Mint...
...first page purports to be a reprint of the article by President Eliot entitled "Political Principles and Tendencies;" as only one omission is indicated, the reader is obliged to inter that the article, with the exception of that single omission, is printed just as it appeared in the Outlook. But comparison with the original shows in the reprint many other omissions, of matter which is not insignificant, but so essential to the integrity of the presentation of President Eliot's views, that in some cases what is left, because of the omission, becomes hardly intelligible, and in other cases gives...
From the paragraph on the tariff, two passages are omitted. The first, making intelligible the last sentence of the Democrat's reprint, is as follows: "Since the Democratic party has absolutely thrown away the low tariff position which such leaders as Cleveland, Carlisle, Wilson, and Russell won for it, the reciprocity doctrine of the Republican party seems to afford the best immediate opportunity for liberal legislation; although it must be confessed that progress towards world-wide trade is more likely to come through the logic of events than than through legislation--that is, through the increasing superiority of American industries...