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...Collegiate Radical" may be criticized (and in some respects not without justice) but he is not to be condemned. Certainly no college man should be characterized as an "anaemic undergraduate" (aside from consideration of courtesy)--because he has been seen reading "The Liberator" or similar publications. There is at least this much to be said in favor of the Collegiate Radical as against his conservative colleague in the matter of reading, the former usually displays an intellectual aggressiveness which is generally lacking in the case of his conservative critic. And it can harm no college man to read "The Liberator...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 3/3/1920 | See Source »

Today the Glee Club, despite the forebodings of those sceptics who said such a thing was impossible, is now on equal terms with any chorus in America. PENFIELD ROBERTS '16, Music Critic for the Boston Globe

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Music Critic of the Boston Globe Finds Kreisler Concert Success | 3/1/1920 | See Source »

...Hoover. Charging him with the arch-offense (from Mr. Reed's point of view) of being kindly disposed toward Great Britain, he expressed grave apprehension concerning the possibilities of British domination over the United States in the League of Nations during the Hoover administration. In the Sunday Advertiser a critic who is less well-known as well as less self-contained, divides a whole page between assailing Admiral Sims for alleged pro-British activity and libelling our recent ally...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AMERICA AND JOHN BULL | 1/26/1920 | See Source »

...piece is a most elusive thing and extremely difficult to get across the footlights. That the performance almost succeeded in doing this is a matter for no little praise. In fact, the effort was such an admirable one, and there is so much to commend, that a would-be critic hesitates to mention any of the faults--we have too few performances of such plays in America...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRAMATIC CLUB'S SUCCESS DESERVES COMMENDATION | 12/11/1919 | See Source »

...least, the best undergraduate opinion as well as the best undergraduate literary ability at Harvard, to embark on a red-hot campaign of bitter personal invective against the President, no matter who he may be, of these United States. Whatever he has done or left undone, no American critic seriously doubts that President Wilson is striving today, as he has always striven, to advance what he considers to be the best interests of the American people. Therefore for an undergraduate magazine to embark upon an editorial policy so shamelessly bigoted and blindly partisan, dropping as it does to extremes which...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A WORD TO THE WISE. | 5/19/1919 | See Source »

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