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Writer

S. H. W.

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The Crimson Playgoer

"Eskimo" is without any question the best picture of its type that has ever been produced; but more than this,

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

"Should Ladies Behave" screen adaptation of that popular comedy, "The Vinegar Tree" that it is line with the recently surging

The Crimson Playgoer

James Cagney's latest tough boy spiel, now on the University sheet under the cognomen of "Lady Killer," is the fastest

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

The Marx brothers' latest film is laid in Freedonia; the scene, of course, is unimportant; it seems to present the

"CHRISTOPHER BEAN" -- University

Dr. Haggett  Lionel Barrymore Abby  Marie Dressler Mrs. Haggett  Beulah Bondi You mustn't hold it against "Christopher Bean" if the Hollywood press-agents have

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

King Rudolph of Langenstein  Jack Edwards Donald McArthur, (American Actor)  Guy Robertson Con Conley (His Press Agent)  Andrew Tombes Queen Erna of Langenstein  Nancy

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

Steve Morgan  Max Baer Belle Mercer  Myrna Loy Willie Ryan  Otto Kruger The Professor  Walter Huston Primo Carnera  Primo Carnera Jack Dempsey  Jack Dempsey One of

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

Chuck Connors  Wallace Beery Steve Brody  George Raft Swipes  Jackle Cooper Lucy Calhoun  Fay Ray "The Bowery" is a tale of the lower castes

THE CRIMSON PLAYGOER

"Lady For A Day," the featured picture at the University, blazons forth its moderate virtues through the medium of a

CRIMSON PLAYGOER

Buckley Joyce Thomas is the bellowing, ranting, go-getter, international correspondent of the Chicago Globe. He appears on the screen captured

BOOKENDS

BOOKS of travel, and, more especially, those little volumes of impressionistic essays on foreign lands, are often more revealing of

BOOKENDS

"T HE Melody of Chaos" is a very apt title for this attempt to interpret the works of Conrad Aiken

Economic and Social Life in America

T HIS is a scholarly book, well clotted with footnotes and quotations. In fact the quotations take up as much

BOOKENDS

T HE appearance of a book of poetry is even less likely to produce any stir of interest than the

BOOKENDS

AROUND Harvard the Everymans Library is probably the most extensively read of any of the various uniformly printed, series. Certainly

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