Word: cartoon
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...engravings by Marcantonio Raimondi have been added recently to the Print Collection of the Fogg Museum: the Climbers, after Michelangelo, and the Judgement of Paris, after Raphael. The former is interesting especially because it is one of few contemporaneous copies of the important cartoon, now lost, which represented an episode in the war between the Florentines and the Pisans. The latter is a fine early impression from one of Marcantonio's most beautiful plates...
...members of the CRIMSON board made the "story" of his death in Saturday's issue partake somewhat of the humorous. However, we leave it to our valued contemporary (with which Mr. Wister was, we are told, "affiliated") to smooth out the crumpled galley sheets and draw thereon a lively cartoon. We would suggest some appropriate scene from that best of Harvard College tales. "Philosophy 4." Nothing would convince us more surely that Wister is still, fortunately, very much alive...
...narrowness, we fear the author of yesterday's communication acquired writer's cramp. Certainly there is no attempt at ridicule, and we doubt if any one of that galaxy of fifteen stellar athletes who clamor at our gates would be so supersensitive as to let a lone cartoon of his race influence his choice of college. If such there be, he is unworthy of the sod which has furnished a greater part of the world's wit and humor. We say this advisedly because by a strange coincidence the man who drew the picture and the president of the board...
...Sargent; "New Buildings at Harvard," by J. Adams, Jr., '08: "The Shame of the Colleges--Harvard," by W. Irwin; "An Empty House," by J. H. Wheelock '08; "The French Play," by H. von Kaltenborn sC.; "An Exponent of German Culture at Harvard," by H. Askowith '07: Cartoon Page, by R. S. Hoar '09; Editorials...
...merry-andrew making his parting bow to his audience. The illustrations, as usual, touch various sides of college life and interest, from the discussion of "easy" courses--here between the Dean and the Freshman--to the rumors of alliance with the Institute of Technology. To the latter the principal cartoon and an editorial article are devoted, both conceived in what expansionists would doubtless call the spirit of the "Little-Harvarder," to whom his tight little Yard is world enough. The other drawings, including many initials and sail-pieces, are generally good. The subject of the piece at the bottom...