WHAT NEWS OF LONDON?
Date: 27 February 1938
Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES
After numerous last-minute obstacles, Rosamund Lehmann's dramatization of her own novel, "No More Music," will be given its first stage presentation by the International Theatre Club at the Duke of York's Theatre on Sunday and the two following Sundays.
Full Article
News and Views of Literary London
Date: 27 February 1938
By Herbert W. Horwill
Herbert Horwill
IT seems a pity that, while verbatim reports are regularly published of the proceedings in Parliament and Congress, no full account is ever availableof the debates at the EnglishSpeaking Union.
Full Article
GOSSIP OF THE RIALTO; NEWS AND GOSSIP OF 'HE BROADWAY AREA
Date: 27 February 1938
THERE was Tecumseh at the telegraph, asking Helen Hayes about this report that she had received a script of SinclairLewis's new play, "Queeny." From Chicago, where she and "Victoria Regina" were holding forth, Miss Hayes made answer, cagily:
Full Article
POUND CHEAPENS LITTLE; Swayed by Political News, It Is Near Pre-Crisis Level
Date: 28 February 1938
Wireless to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Sterllng exchange has been swayed by the week's developments in the British political situation, but in terms of the dollar it has at the week-end depreciated little from the position it held immediately before the crisis.
Full Article
NEWS OF THE NIGHT CLUBS; Regarding the German American--Billy Milton and Benay Venuta Join the Scene
Date: 27 February 1938
By Jack Gould
Jack Gould
A PLACE where collegiate, past and present, are wont to give evidence that they never really graduate is the history-fragrant German American Rathskeller, at Third Avenue and Seventeenth Street.
Full Article
JERSEY CLUBS UNITE FOR NEWS SEMINARS; First in Series of 3 Meetings Will Be Held Tomorrow in Newark Store
Date: 27 February 1938
Internatl Relations Dept plans news seminars
Full Article
NEWS OF THE SCREEN; Rose Stradner Loaned by MGM to RKO-Work Started on 'Idiot's Delight' by Metro Coast Scripts Of Local Origin
Date: 28 February 1938
Special to THE NEW YORK TIMES
Abandoning its policy of retention of its foreign stars for Metro's exclusive use, MGM has made its second loan of an imported player within a week.
Full Article
The Men Who Write Washington News; THE WASHINGTON CORREPONDENTS. By Leo C. Rosten. 436 pp. New York: Harcourt, Brace & Co. $3.
Date: 27 February 1938
Rosten, Leo C; Washington Correspondents
Full Article
NEWS OF THE STAGE; 'Save Me the Waltz' Tonight-Eliot Play to Close Next Saturday-League and Union Face Crisis Will Not Arbitrate Show May Curtail Tour
Date: 28 February 1938
The new business of this evening, at the Martin Beck Theatre, is "Save Me the Waltz," or Kathanihe Dayton's comedy about romance in a totalitarian State. This is the Miss Dayton who, with George S. Kaufman, wrote "First Lady" in 1935; her name alone is signed to this one, with Mr. Kaufman in the background as a sort of consultant..
Full Article