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Writer

Alice E. Kinzler

Latest Content

The 400 Blows

Occasionally, a movie is made in which the invisible director is the most important element. Such, happily, is the case

Destruction of Last Just Man Depicts Plight of Modern Jew

The plight of the modern Jew is thoroughly treated in such disparate novels as The Wall and Remember Me to

Grisbi

Gallic gangster movies are like opera libretti; there are certain characteristics common to each succeeding story. These essential ingredients are,

Vive la Difference

Once every four years, the Mr. Hyde in Arthur Schlesinger emerges and he abandons the genteel ivory towers of scholarship

Harvard in Song

In its first recording under the leadership of Elliot Forbes '40, the Harvard Glee Club offers an interesting potpourri entitled

Inspector Maigret

French crime movies are undoubtedly the best of the species, and Inspector Maigret is no exception. In the great tradition

The House I Live In

I suppose the Russians exported The House I Live In to prove that family life among the Soviets is no

Continental Cafe

Father Feeney has deserted the little red house on 12 Bow Street to go on to bigger and better things.

Researchers Investigate the Hypnotic State

Hypnosis is a much misunderstood phenomenon. The layman tends to conceive of it in the most mystical terms, and there

The Crucible

It's a pity that the French were the first to attempt an adaptation of Arthur Miller's controversial play The Crucible.

Old Scholars Never Fade; Scientists Go Away

"What do emeritus professors do? They lie in the sun and drink." Thus retired member of the faculty jokingly described

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