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...graduate, writes his own record reviews, and has done much valuable work in the field of record collecting, bringing to light obscure yet excellent musicians, and the like. Contributors have included George Avakian, who is responsible for Decca's Chicago Jazz Album and many of the Columbia reissues, George Frazier, who is more or less responsible for Bobby Hackett, and a number of other well-known critics, musicians, photographers and artists. Each issue carries a comprehensive news column with complete information on where your favorite bands are and for how long and whatever else you might want to know. Finally...

Author: By Charles Miller, | Title: SWING | 2/15/1941 | See Source »

Miss Corio's talent is far from being as one-tracked as the interest of a Howard audience. During the vacations she acts in summer theatres. Last summer she was at Brattle Hall. At present she is finishing her first book, an autobiography, written in collaboration with George Frazier of Harvard. Her own troupe of entertainers travels with her. She is proud of her Girls in Blue chorus, and thinks it may contain future stars. "A girl, though," he says, "he to reveal certain talents before she can take...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BURLESQUE QUEEN BARES ALL DURING NETWORK PROGRAM | 12/20/1940 | See Source »

Alan Gottlieb '41, President of the Harvard Liberal Union and Theodore 1. Frazier '41, President of the Harvard Willkie Club, spoke for the student body. Charles Mcllwain, Professor of Government, presided

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LABOR, G. O. P., DEMOCRATS ASK FOR UNITY | 11/14/1940 | See Source »

Undergraduate factions will be represented by T. J. Frazier '41, President of the Harvard Willkie Club, Alan Gottlieb '41, President of the Harvard Liberal Union, and Grenville Clark...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MEETING FOR UNITY OF U. S. ON DEFENSE | 11/13/1940 | See Source »

...George Frazier, '33, record critic for Mademoiselle ("The Magazine for Smart Young Women" who can't think farther than the next week-end party), has the following to say about Charlie Barnet: "I happen to think that Barnet's records are uniformly stinking. . . I can't tolerate Barnet because he and the music he sponsors are doing irreparable injury to the cause of reputable, heartfelt jazz." This is all based on the fact that Charlie Barnet "has had the colossal bad taste to ape the one inimitable band around today and the result is something cheap and disgusting." Needless...

Author: By Charles Miler, | Title: SWIN | 11/9/1940 | See Source »

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