Word: criticizing
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...Critic will continue publication with an issue appearing the middle of next week, it was announced by the Board of Editors yesterday, contradicting rumors that the magazine would be suspended until next fall. A new and more readable style of type will be used in this issue...
...consult the statistics he gathered from this table. The reason for the unpopularity of the cheaper magazines over the more expensive publications is only too apparent. We find our critic's conclusions amazing in the extreme. That they are surely false is proved by the popularity of periodicals like the "New Yorker," "Stage," and "Vanity Fair." Especially to be commended is the Freshman's preference of the "Yale Records" to the "Harvard Lampoon." We might also commend their pertinacity in resisting the wiles of the coy cowboy, who presumptiously attempts to arbitrate on their literary selection--a task hardly suitable...
...which would bring him the most richness of life, but only the greatest recognition and puissance. This attitude of mind, literally forced upon him by his own awareness of his ancestors, made him throughout his life a casuistic ironic appraiser of his times; and more, an over careful critic of himself. Lacking any great emotional reservoirs, he felt that artists worked only to gain social superiority, he based his judgments and his analyses almost wholly upon intellectual precepts. It was this cold intelligence that made him so acutely aware of the lacks of his time and kept him, unlike...
...youngsters off by helping them pull their colored snappers, adjust their paper caps. C. At a press conference last week President Roosevelt outlined his plans for establishing an "extraordinary budget" to cover emergency expenditures for relief, public works, mortgage refinancing. By this method of bookkeeping which many a critic condemns as concealing the true state of Federal finances, the President would "constructively"' balance the regular Budget, ordinary receipts against ordinary expenses, and perhaps have a small surplus. All extraordinary outlays, derived from long-term bond issues instead of current tax receipts, would be set aside for the next generation...
...with Mrs. Shaw, he climbed into a plane to fly-before re-embarking at San Pedro and sailing around to New York- down to San Simeon to visit Publisher William Randolph Hearst. There, while Marion Davies and other guests "drank in every word," Mr. Hearst's syndicated cinema critic, Louella 0. Parsons, had an exclusive audience. Excerpts from her report...