Word: criticalness
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After receiving a degree from both the College and the Law School here, Mr. Hapgood began newspaper work in 1893 and since then has been actively engaged in journalism. He was dramatic and literary critic for the New York Commercial Advertiser and for the "Bookman" until 1902, when he assumed the editorship of "Collier's Weekly." Under his guidance, that paper has since become one of the most widely read and most influential of the popular periodicals...
MODERN LANGUAGE CONFERENCE. "Influence of Milton from Dryden to Keats." Mr. R. D. Havens. "Addison as a Literary Critic." Mr. E. K. Broadus. Common Room, Conant Hall...
...Blind," by Lee Simonson, a piece of symbolistic satire in dialogue, hardly hits its mark. A review of Mr. Hermann Hagedorn's "Silver Blade" is highly laudatory but not very discerning. The play seems to have been not well understood by the critic. A former editorial, pointing out the advantages of the Degree with Distinction in History and Literature, is reprinted with good reason...
...poor critic that resents criticism." The communication published in another column this morning presents a point of view different from that already given by and through the CRIMSON. In taking the stand it did, the CRIMSON, realizing that a bad mistake had been made, blamed the track management for an error in judgment. We still believe that this error was made. To say so can hardly be called jumping at conclusions. No one makes mistakes on purpose; the only fair way to consider the matter is whether or not the track management should have been able to foresee the result...
Tomorrow evening Mr. Copeland will give a brief address on "The Life and Work of Sheridan," and read from Sheridan's farce "The Critic" before the Philadelphia Teachers' Association...