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Word: columnism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...benefit of its readers who frequent the theatres in Boston, the CRIMSON will hereafter publish on Wednesday mornings reviews of the plays which come to Boston. In addition to criticism, the dramatic column will contain jottings of interest to theatre goers...

Author: By H. F. S., | Title: THE CRIMSON PLAY-GOER | 3/17/1920 | See Source »

...attempt to "screen" one of the searching character delineations of Sir Arthur Pinero, one of the seathing satires of Bernard Shaw, or one of the witty farces of W. S. Maugham, would be quite as futile as are the condensed novels of Thackeray which appear complete in one newspaper column...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SCREEN VS. SCENE. | 3/9/1920 | See Source »

Rising to greater heights in the scoring column that any Crimson seven of the past ever reached in a Princeton game, the University hockey team closed its season and clinched the Intercollegiate ice title on Saturday evening, when it trounced the Tiger septet 10 to 1 in the large Philadelphia Ice Palace. Harvard's supremacy in every department of the game was very apparent throughout the three periods, and as a result Maxwell, the Princeton goal tend suffered a heavy and continued bombardment, while the Crimson net was very rarely in danger. No penalties were incurred in the contest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 10 TO 1 VICTORY OVER TIGERS GIVES CRIMSON CLEAR RIGHT TO INTERCOLLEGIATE ICE TITLE | 3/8/1920 | See Source »

Today, when every morning's paper brings news of towns that have been dry for generations landsliding into the wet column; when 2.75 per cent, and 3.50 per cent beers are being upheld by local courts throughout the country; When the workings of the Anti-Saloon League are being investigated by the New York Assembly, we find Mr. Barleycorn exhibiting the same old kick that made him famous...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BARLEYCORN'S COMEBACK | 3/8/1920 | See Source »

...Golden Gate not as one of the besieging host, but as the chronicler par excellence, William C. Spargo. The witty style will at once appear familiar to any who read the sporting page of one of the large Boston evening papers and who enjoy the "Speaking of Sport" Column. As the foreword explains, the booklet was written as a readable memento of the seventeen days journey in which the Crimson cohort with its field marshals invaded the unknown region to the west and for the first time reduced "barbarian" challengers to submission...

Author: By G. D. Flynn jr., | Title: THE STORY OF THE NEW ARGOSY OF THE YEAR 1919. | 3/6/1920 | See Source »

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