Writer
W. E. H.
Latest Content
The Playgoer
Like the characters in the "Ascent of F-6," the Dramatic Club, in its present production, has hit a new peak
Tbe Playgoer
Skyscrapers, subways, slums and slicks, seven million people from the Bronx to Coney, that's the phenomenon people call New York
The Playgoer
Just how much can a man take? Just how long can a man compromise with his ideals before he rears
The Playgoer
Japan, Victorian England, and Harlem is a wild combination in any man's way of thinking. But such a combination conceived
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
Gentlemen, the New England Repertory has really been kicking the gong around of late. With a flying swan dive off
THE PLAYGOER
In its second production of the season, Alan Gray Holmes' stock company of Boston is hitting the pace. With Erford
CRIMSON PLAYGOER
The trumpets have blared and the drums have rolled, publicity has poured forth in torrents and "Kiss the Boys Good-bye"
The Crimson Bookshelf
As a contributor to the "Catholic Worker," Peter Maurin is one of the most widely read writers of the present
The Bookshelf
I T will take a world-culture, the flower of a system of world-states, in order to ensure the appreciation by
CRIMSON BOOKSHELF
T HESE two books show that Mr. Auden's poetic talent is still prolific, but its direction is as confused as