Vol. 15 No. 6 1948 - page 626

THESE memoirs of a beloved
teacher and public figure
tell of some of the best
years
of our national life.
"The work of an
extraordinarily courageous
and gallant man. . . .
A fitting capstone
to
a
wonderful career."
-JOHN GUNTHER
Robert Morss
Lovett's
ALL OUR
YEARS
THE
VIKING
PRESS
$3.75
Genius-or
Intellectual
Tarantism?
T. S.
ELIOT
A SELECTED CRITIQUE
Edited by
LEONARD UNGER
~E
first
American symposium
on Eliot - Conrad Aiken,
Ezra Pound, Van Wyck Brooks,
R . P. Blackmur, Stephen Spen–
der, Edmund Wilson, and twenty–
five others examine the work of
today'~
leading poet and most
influential critic.
$5.00
at
all bookstores
RINEHART
1r
COMPANY
CONTRIBUTORS
NEWTON ARVIN hos written crit–
ical studies of Whitmon and Haw–
thorne.
ELIZABETH 'BISHOP, who won the
Houghton Mifflin Poetry Award
for 1946, is living in Moine.
ANATOLE BROYARD hos pub–
lished reviews in The New Leader.
JAMES BURNHAM's dialogue with
Andre Molraux, originally printed
in the April PR, has been issued in
book form by Rondom House.
LESLIE FIEDLER's story "The Teeth"
appeared in the January PR.
SIDNEY HOOK is the outhor of
"Reoson, Social Myths and De–
mocracy," "The Hero in History:
A Study in Limitation and Possi–
bility::· and "Educotion for Modern
Man.
GEORGE
L.
K. MORRIS, a former
editor of PR, had a one-man show
of his paintings last November in
Paris, and in New York in February.
ERNEST NAGEL is a professor of
philosophy ot Columbia.
ISAAC ROSENFELD's second nov–
el, "The Enemy," will be brought
out later this yeor by Viking.
STEPHEN SPENDER is lecturing at
Sarah Lawrence.
The drowings by Byron Browne and
Hans Hofmonn hove been repro–
duced through the courtesy of the
Kootz Gallery.
623,624,625 627,628,629,630,631,632,633,634,635,636,...738
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