Word: pressingly
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...page pictorial, an extra will be printed tomorrow afternoon, giving a play-by-play account of the game. This extra will go on sale by the time the returning crowd reaches Anderson Bridge after the game. In years past the Yale game extra has come off the press 30 seconds after the finish of the game, and it is expected that this record will be duplicated tomorrow...
...rising generation of authors and critics. Moreover, the present personnel of the paper, as well as the owner and several higher officials, includes several Harvard men. E. F. Gay, formerly Dean of the Business School, is president, and Mr. C. C. Lane, one time director of the University Press, is publicity manager. It is partly because the "Evening Post" is so closely connected with the University but more especially on account of its continuous devotion to the highest principles of public service and the best literary standards, that the CRIMSON takes this welcome opportunity of wishing it many happy returns...
...Democratic National Convention at San Francisco in 1920, Mr. Cummings delivered the key-note address, covering the political situation so well that he was acclaimed by the press of both parties as one of the foremost political thinkers in the country...
...interested in what college men, with their fresh point of view, are thinking, Newspapers, always quick to catch anything of "news value", are continually printing articles on undergraduate opinion. But at Harvard, expressions of opinion coming from the student body as a whole are all too few. Probably the press of activities, the large number of evening meetings and rehearsals--rather than the much-mooted Harvard indifference--make frequent large gatherings for the discussion of public questions more or less impracticable...
...facts, little convincing argument, and no really definite reasons for voting against Tammany. Mayor Hylan, addressing the crowd that cheered him upon his reelection, urged the newspapers to "reform and change their course". This is good advice, though not in quite the sense that "Hizzonner" intended. If the press hopes to overcome the corrupt influences and mould public opinion, it must change its methods. It might even do well to emulate the style of Mr. Brisbane, who is unfortunately hiring the country's best editorial ability to serve its worst interests. The political logic of a large city...