Word: criticizing
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Allstaire Cooke, visiting English dramatic critic, will deliver the first of two lectures on "The Contemporary Theater" this afternoon at 5.15 o'clock in Emerson Hall. The second lecture will take place on Monday, December 4 at the same time and place...
...hope that the Harvard Critic might sharply differentiate itself from the other undergraduate publications is not furthered by Number 1 of Volume 2. Anything in it might just as well have appeared in the advocate; in fact much of it has appeared there...
...trouble with the Critic, if I may end an unpleasant review with advice, is that it does not criticize. Nothing in this issue violates the policies of the Harvard publications against which the editors of the Critic were protesting a year ago. Nothing in it is sufficiently novel, arresting or unorthodox to justify the Critic's existence as a separate publication. If it is not to be more of a gadfly than this, it ought to merge with an older sheet and boost the advertising rates. I trust that it will not. Harvard can use some gadflies, but they...
Retired. Philip Hale, 79, dean of U. S. music critics; as critic for the Boston Herald and program annotator for the Boston Symphony Orchestra. A onetime lawyer, he studied music in Berlin, Munich, Stuttgart, Paris, became an organist and choral conductor, a newspaper critic in 1890. As Herald critic since 1903, he was famed for witty, lucid, learned writing, for his bright Windsor ties and for the green felt bag which he carried almost everywhere...
...officers of the Critic are: Howard M. Lawn '34, Daniel J. Boorstin '34, Richard M. Goodwin '34, Harold S. Saxe '34, and Richard B. Schlatter...