Word: reprinting
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...Deturs and the Man Who Gave Them" is a reprint of Dr. Edward Everett Hale's address in Sanders Theatre at the award of academic distinctions in December, and "Harvard's Religious Life" is the explanation by Mr. J. D. Greene '96, published in the Evening Transcript, of the cessation of contributions by the University to pew rents in some of the Cambridge churches. Several short articles, a review of several recent biographies, and an abstract of President Eliot's report complete the number...
...first ten students, in the classes for those years. Such an article bearing on the never settled question of academic distinctions in college as an earnest of future services, is always of interest. An article by Professor Kuno Francke on "Emperor William's Gift to Harvard," is a reprint of his speech delivered at the opening exercises of the Germanic Museum, November 10. "From a Graduate's Window: Contrasts Pleasant or Otherwise," presents strikingly the in-adequacy of the salaries of Harvard professors of today and fifty years...
...February number of the Monthly contains unusually little of interest or merit. "Academic Truth," the reprint of a speech delivered in Sanders Theatre by Francis Cabot Lowell, and an essay on "Stephen Phillips and His Work," by O. J. Campbell, are the only articles worth careful reading. "A Winter Ode," by H. W. Holmes, has no little beauty of description. But the Monthly has seldom--if ever--given twenty pages of space to a weaker effort than "The Tower of Silence; a Play," or published a poem more out-of-place than the doggerel verses, "On a Certain Retaining Wall...
...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...