Word: reprinting
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...down (and in more ways than one). Mr. Hutchinson may be the publicity seeker: he may even have beamed with delight over some of his notoriety: if so he has his reward. The Post's comment has certainly mingled his wine with wries however, and for you to reprint this seems a bit unTiMEly. His mistake in this case has no bearing on the one of the past [embezzling] and vice versa. What he needs now are sound advice and boosts, not blows which strike below the belt...
...this year, of which the CRIMSON is apparently unaware, the CRIMSON's review is in error, both in regard to the professor in charge of the course, and in assuming that he will conduct it as his predecessor did. It does not seem fair for the CRIMSON to reprint aged reviews of courses, disregarding the fact that the personnel and entire character of a course may be changed without its knowledge. D. S. Tarbell...
...GOOD SHEPHERD?John Rathbone Oliver?Stokes ($2). A revised reprint of a novel first published in 1917 under the pseudonym John Roland. An inspirational novel of how a U. S. doctor, in the Austrian Tyrol, modifies his own as well as other people's spots. One of the best medical tales ever written...
...Government systematically at the express direction of Daniel Uriburu (nephew). 2) That the first public meeting last week of 10,000 of Dr. Irigoyen's adherents was dampened by rain, then dispersed by firemen who threatened to souse the already damp Irigoyenists. 3) That Critica was privileged to reprint an "Invitation to witness the burning of the Critica building" issued by the new Government's adherents. Within a few hours after this alleged expose, the Government censor passed a news cable carrying a "public announcement" by the Government's adherents that they would burn the Critica building...
...more works were published yesterday, the seventh volume of "The Pepys Ballads," edited by Professor Hyder Edward Rollins of the English Department; and "A Garland for John Donne," edited by Dr. Theodore Spencer, also of the English Department. This seventh volume of "The Pepys Ballads" concludes Professor Rollins's reprints from the Pepys Collection, although it will presently be followed by an eighth, containing Indexes to the whole work. Some of these ballads are of a strictly historical nature; numerous others deal with the troubles of lovelorn maidens; various have to do with deeds of passion and violence, expiated...