Word: criticizing
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...author with a precision which a scientist might envy and a quality which stamps it as literary. He is to be congratulated on having accomplished the most important work of its kind which has appeared in the last decade from the pen of any English speaking art critic...
...consisting of D. Carb '09, D. Gardiner 1L., and E. B. Sheldon '08, has been appointed to take charge of this department. The graduate committee of the club, consisting of Professor G. P. Baker '87, Mr. Winthrop Ames, the well known theatre manager, and Mr. H. T. Parker, dramatic critic of the Boston Transcript, will make the final choice. It is especially requested that all men interested in such a competition communicate with E. B. Sheldon '08, Prescott 10, before June...
...best preparation for a journalistic career for the college man is a study and practice of English composition and a thorough general culture in the best sense of the term. Specialization in art, music or some other branch of culture with a view to being a critic in this branch is not desirable; on the other hand, what is essential is a love for writing, a keen imagination and enthusiasm...
...Hapgood is one of the younger Harvard men who have achieved success in journalistic work. While an undergraduate he was editor-in-chief of the Harvard Monthly. After graduating from the College and Law School, he became dramatic and literary critic for the "New York Commercial Advertiser" and for the "Bookman," and has been actively engaged in newspaper and magazine work since then. In 1903, he assumed the editorship of "Collier's Weekly," and under his guidance that paper has become one of the most widely read and most influential of the popular periodicals...
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...