Word: papered
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Great success attended the thirty-seventh anniversary dinner of the CRIMSON which was held in the Trophy Room of the Union last night. Besides about twenty-five former editors of the paper, President Lowell and several members of the Faculty and of the Student Council were present as guests of the CRIMSON. Representatives of the Yale News, the Daily Princetonian, and the Cornell Sun also attended the dinner. Between the courses the University Glee Club double quartet sang a number of songs. F. Ayer, Jr., '11 acted as toastmaster...
...Walker, speaking for the Yale News, took as his subject the effects of a college paper on broadening college spirit. With its many good effects, college spirit is nevertheless liable to make the undergraduate think solely of his alma mater, because he either goes to college for study, or else only to make acquaintances. By publishing items of general interest and by keeping in touch with other universities, the Yale News is trying to obviate this disadvantage...
...future of college journalism. The possibilities seem to be more in the editorial column than in the news. Students today are prone to take on an assumption of vacuity, which of necessity is reflected in the editorials. They are not up to the standard of the rest of the paper and there is place for a man of force and personality to express his own opinions. The undergraduate is at college to get ideas, but as long as he pretends to be unwilling to do this, the influence of the editorials of college dailies must be weak...
...known as the Henry M. Phillips Prize, will be awarded for an essay on "The Treaty-making Power of the United States and the methods of its enforcement as affecting the Police Powers of the States." All essays must be type-written on one side of the paper only, and must bear an assumed name. All essays must be handed in to the American Philosophical Society, 104 South Fifth street. Philadelphia, Pa., before January...
...remembered that ideas can be conveyed in fiction as well as in the essay. And the editorials, of which one is inaccurate and the others add little to the material contained in the rest of the number, might easily be strengthened. But from the worst sin of a college paper--that of lack of ideas--this number of the Advocate is notably free; and now it only remains for the paper to make its stories and editorials as good as its essays...