Word: writer
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Revolutionists," I beg to make reply to the letter in yesterday's CRIMSON upholding drinking at class smokers. The writer asks--"Have those who prefer beer ever objected to the serving of ginger ale or sarsaparilla"? Let me suggest that the men who drink beer never have any excuse for objecting to their soft-drink neighbors. In many cases, the compliment cannot be returned. He then asks--"How many members of the class would attend a smoker at which no beer was served"? If a man has so little class spirit, that he will not come to a smoker unless...
Hereafter, the CRIMSON will assign a special writer to give a full and graphic description with illustrations of each day's weather on the following day,--provided there...
...workmanship and not always of crystal clearness. The bit of verse following, "From a Warm Room," one is uncertain whether to take seriously or humorously. After this come the "Glimpses," of Paris and of Boston respectively. The former--"Paris: Under a Bridge"--is very good description, except that the writer, with that serene disregard of natural fact which appears in so much undergraduate production, seems to make gorse and heather one and the same and both purple. (The reviewer at least had supposed them different and gorse yellow). In the second sketch--"Boston: Mount Vernon Street"--not only is there...
Each essay should bear a nom de plume or arbitrary sign which should be included in an accompanying letter, giving the writer's real name and class. Both letter and essay should reach Professor G. G. Wilson, Matthews 32, not later than February...
...unimportant misprints are excusable in a periodical produced under the difficulties due to the distance between writer and printer. Proof-reading of English is not always as easy for foreign students in America as for most of us. At the end of the first sentence in Section III of Professor Royce's article, for instance, "experienced" must be for "expressed," that is,--"set forth in writing." Professor Royce has experienced the truth that tolerance and loyalty are of the same great motives, but here he is referring to the fact that he has stated that truth as a doctrine...