Word: admitedly
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...claim to review Ex shows "to offer a forum for discussion of these innovative works." Admirable. But, as you admit, "[t]he reviews are the perceptions and critiques solely of the writer," any any substantial response in your pages is unlikely. Does a single opinion constitute a "discussion"? How are your reviews a forum for anyone but your arts staff? The best true forum for discussion, the conversation of theatre-goers, has been thriving for some time without your help. The written monologues of reviewers, aimed at readers who have not seen the production, can never replace the dialogue...
...agency. Says Kerrey: "This is the No. 1 domestic problem, and it isn't being given the attention it deserves. Bush has dropped the ball." Even so, Congress and the Administration are likely to avoid returning to the S&L problem this year. Almost no one wants to admit defeat on a much applauded plan so soon after enacting the original legislation. As they look the other way, the meter is running higher and higher on a faltering campaign...
...must admit that we were quite flattered when we saw that an entire page of The Crimson had been devoted to the Wellesley College Senate Bus ["Enduring a Boring Trip for City's Excitement," February 26]. We don't think that the Wellesley News has ever printed an entire feature page on, say, the Harvard shuttle...
Harvard's prestigious name may have allowed it to maintain a quality student body despite the smaller pool. Nonetheless, even Harvard officials admit it's getting tougher and tougher to attract qualified applicants...
...Admit it. No matter how interested you are in serious news, every so often you glance at a gossip column, scanning its staccato list of items and bold- faced names to see if there is anything of interest . . . Yet, is American society becoming too obsessed with gossip, too absorbed with the private lives of public people? . . . For Naushad Mehta, interviewing columnist Liz Smith and her brethren for this week's cover stories was an amusing change of pace . . . Though Mehta kept asking about the troublesome issues raised by our national infatuation with the trivial, her subjects kept changing the topic...