Word: reviews
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...stuff, Mr. Caturani! Once again, Harvard CRIMSON, your Dramatie Editor crashes through for the rubber toothpick. His review of "Her Lips Retray" has an imaginative quality rarely seen nowadays...
...Union Dining Hall, after Miss Florence Murray, headwaitress had required her to take the curls out of her hair, because she looked "too much like a Hula-Hula girl." It is interesting to know that before every meal each of the waitresses in the Union must pass in review and execute an about-face in front of Miss Murray. Any traces of powder, rouge or lipstick call for serious rebuke. Little wonder that many of the waitresses resort to the Tent and Normandie ballrooms for relief. Well, despite our old-fashioned regulations, perhaps the situation down at Yale is worse...
...review of Ulysses is a fine piece of work. I thank you for it. There is a comment that should be made on a line or two of it. Your last column on p. 49 tells us that those who learn life from books will find Ulysses preeminently valuable...
...board chairman and "chief executive" of Continental Illinois, President Roosevelt got around last week to picking his successor as FDIC's chairman. He was a Wisconsin banker named Leo Thomas Crowley and no tyro at New Dealing. Long before March 4, as chairman of Wisconsin's Banking Review Board by appointment of Governor La Follette, Mr. Crowley sponsored legislation to insure deposits of public monies and to bolster weak Wisconsin banks. Lately he has been close to Henry Morgenthau Jr. as the Farm Credit Administration's general agent in the St. Paul district...
...highly praised by Professor Dewey. The last chapters are an excellent attack along these lines. As Dewey says, they show beautifully the fundamental differences between literature, an art, and linguistic science. Then, from a somewhat different point of view, "Our Lost Leaders" by Professor I. A. Richards ("The Saturday Review of Literature," April 1, 1933). There is also an article by Professor Hillyer, in a recent "Forum," and one, not specifically literary, by Ezra Pound in the November "Harkness Hoot." Peter A. Pertzoff...