Word: transcript
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...eighteenth annual dinner and election of officers of the Illustrated will take place at the Hotel Georgian, Monday evening at 7 o'clock. Mr. F. W. C. Hersey '99, of the English department; B. Kline '06, magazine editor of the Boston Transcript; H. Brightman '11, assistant advertising manager of Filene's, and C. H. Smith 1L., president of the Illustrated last year, will be among the speakers...
...many other well-known books, will read from his own works and talk briefly about the poetry of the great war. Among the others present will be Mr. Sylvester Baxter, who will also speak on the poetry of the war, and Mr. Edward J. O'Brien, editor the Boston Transcript. A short business meeting will be held just before the regular one, and all members are urged to be present...
...your state has no favorite son, you doubtless know some one whom you could recommend. Said the Transcript recently, in regard to the choice of St. Louis for the Democratic convention: "It makes no difference where you're nominated when you're going to be defeated anyway." Similarly it makes little difference who you are. But the CRIMSON forbears to predict...
...December number of the Illustrated contains some unusually readable articles. Mr. Kline of the Boston Transcript finds in the subway a "drain-pipe" which is sucking from Cambridge the old concentrated spirit of culture. Harvard no longer remains "corked up at work." Perhaps the tube might also be termed a supply-pipe, which conducts into the otherwise closed academic corporation the culture of Boston; and in view of the recent large vote for license in the metropolis, the flow still promises to be as much into Cambridge as out of it. Formerly, Mr. Kline tells us, the student would...
...finds it hard to rid itself of an idea once firmly imbedded. In spite of a rain of facts to the contrary, some persons still believe that our endowed universities are out of the reach of any but men of wealth. The writer of a letter to the Transcript, and the author of a tirade against the University, called "The Educational Octopus," makes the accusation that the "intellectuals of Harvard mistakenly believe that the son of the laboring man should not be allowed to aspire to equality, professionally or otherwise, with the young men of more favored parentage. They...