Word: reprints
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...reprint from the N. Y. Times an interesting and somewhat curious article on our Memorial Hall and its management - interesting as showing the opinions held by outsiders on the matter, and curious for the various misconceptions and exaggeration it contains. De gustibus non disputandum is a motto eminently applicable in this case; but yet it must be acknowledged that the article contains much truth, if sometimes too severely expressed. If it is a fact, as the writer states, that the poor quality of food at Memorial drives many to solace themselves at drug-stores, etc., it might, after...
Probably the only thing in last evening's Star that was not a reprint of the morning's news was a long tirade against the "OEdipus" and Mr. Riddle's acting. Mr. Riddle must feel crushed...
...Lampoon Board, at the request of a large number of its subscribers, have determined to reprint, in pamphlet form, all the best sketches of the First Series. The Lampoons of the first series are now out of print, and this is the only means of obtaining copies of the college wit which has done so much to brighten college life. Subscription books will be opened at Sever's and at Bartlett's next Monday. Only a limited number of these books will be published, and the subscription price will be $1.00 per copy...
...last number of the Yale Record brought us several news items that are so original and startling that we reprint them herewith for the benefit of our readers. From its columns we learn that "Inasmuch as the editors of the HERALD are very careful to preserve a strict incognito, there is a suspicion rife about Cambridge that it may not be a college enterprise, but an outside speculation." We also learn from its columns that the HERALD is printed at the office of a city daily. Taken as a whole, judging from its outside appearance, the last number...
...football, with painted frill fastened to the head of the coffin." The elegist then, in the most excessively mock sanctimonious manner, amid sighs and sobs and groans and lamentations, the noise of which might have been heard for a mile, read by torch-light the address, which we will reprint, with Mr. King's permission, from the Harvard Register...