Word: reprints
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Professor C. H. Grandgent '83 of the University has written "From Latin to Italian," styled a guide book for students of Romance philology. "Tottel's Miscellany" is the title of a book written by Professor H. E. Rollins of the Department of English. This is a reprint of a prominent Elizabethan anthology, and will be followed later by a volume of critical notes. A collection of typical Puritan verse entitled "Handkerchiefs from Paul," by Assistant Professor K. B. Murdock '16 will be published in November...
...wronged the Library by permanently destroying the value of an expensive reference work. Copies of odd volumes, still less of stray pages, of the Britannica are not to be procured from the publishers, and cannot be picked up at the booksellers. To buy a new set, to reprint the missing pages, or even to mend the old pages if they should be returned and to rebind the volume, will be a serious expense, yet the Library must in some way repair the loss. Any course of action or any expression of opinion that will prevent such destruction in the future...
After his paragraphs were syndicated, he held the lead-the high-water mark being 20 of 42 paragraphs quoted in the Digest for March 14, 1925, as the inclosed reprint of the Digest page will show. . , .-There is no competition between paragraphers; but since Mr. Quillen leads the field, we think he should be given proper credit in TIME...
...Autolycus" is the first of these, and the second has the alluring title "The Paradise of Dainty Devices". Rollins is a regular contributor to the University Press. Last year at this time appeared his "A Geergeous Gallery of Gallant Inventions", a volume of late sixteenth century songs, a reprint of a delightful anthology of popular songs of that period...
...terms of the printed article, was somewhat sophistical. A copy of my original manuscript had been in your possession since September and was read and discussed by the members of your board--including the student who wrote the editorial. Because of this and because you had full permission to reprint the manuscript in full subsequent to its publication in Liberty, it would seem that you, and not I, are responsible for the purveying of "that insidious half truth which can make more trouble than all the error possible for any popular periodical to gather in a year." (I quote directly...