Sayfadaki görseller
PDF
ePub

CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE

WILLIAM HOWARD GARDINER,

Vice-President of the Navy League, is known in naval circles, abroad as well as here, as an unusually well-informed student of naval policy in its relation to past and present statecraft.

FRANCIS N. THORPE,

whose death occurred shortly after he had written for this REVIEW the last lines that came from his pen, was the head of the Department of Constitutional History and Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh. He had made a lifelong study of the conditions of government in different countries.

CARLOS E. CASTAÑEDA

is Associate Professor of Modern Languages at the College of William and Mary, and Director of the Summer School in Mexico, which the College of William and Mary conducts every year in coöperation with the National University. Mr. Castañeda contributes to various periodicals on Spanish-American subjects.

SHAW DESMOND,

the well-known Irish writer, is a frequent visitor to America and has traveled and lectured extensively throughout the country, and some of his impressions he records in the present essay. His published works include: The Soul of Denmark, Democracy, God's Labour and The Drama of Sinn Fein.

THE REV. MARTIN J. SCOTT, S.J.,

is the author of several noteworthy books on Christian fundamentals. Among the list are The Credentials of Christianity, The Hand of God and God and Myself. Father Scott, now connected with St. Francis Xavier's College, New York, is an old contributor to this REVIEW.

THE REV. JOSEPH SILVERMAN, D.D., L.H.D.,

the distinguished Hebrew scholar, after thirty-eight years' service as Rabbi of Temple Emanu-El, is now Rabbi Emeritus, and devoting himself to writing and lecturing in the interest of liberalizing reli

gions.

W. E. BURGHARDT DUBOIS

of

was born in Massachusetts and of Negro descent. He was educated at Harvard and Berlin, and has been a social investigator and writer. He is at present Editor of The Crisis, the official organ The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.

Continued on second following page

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][ocr errors][merged small]
[graphic][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

THE LOVE NEST

AND OTHER STORIES

By Ring W. Lardner

"Lardner is a master at the telling of the short story. The art of compression is his. He knows just how far to go and he never goes any farther. Restraint is his watchword. Take, for example, 'Zone of Quiet,' the story of a man in a hospital and the experiences he has with a loquacious nurse."-Boston Transcript. $1.75

FOUR YEARS
BENEATH

THE CRESCENT

By Rafael de Nogales

A Venezuelan soldier of fortune's account of four terrific years in the Turkish army. $3.50

[graphic]

FIX BAYONETS! By John W. Thomason, Jr.

Third Large Printing

"Captain Thomason's book... is of a stark excellence that demands that those who want to know about the war as it really was should read it. It is not the kind of book that should be in every home; it is much better than that. It demands the serious attention of those who can appreciate a prose epic told with the fine simplicity of a saga."-HARVEY ALLEN in the New York Herald Tribune. $3.50

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, FIFTH AVENUE AT 48th STREET, NEW YORK Scribner's Magazine-the Medium for Travel Information

When writing to advertisers kindly mention The North American Review

WILLIAM STARR MYERS,

Professor of Politics at Princeton, and formerly at Johns Hopkins, author of Socialism and American Ideals and American Democracy Today, is recognized as one of the keenest observers and most authoritative critics of current political affairs.

R. L. MÉGROZ,

who lives in London, is a poet and critic. His recent biographical and critical studies are the volumes on Walter de la Mare and The Three Sitwells.

LOW KWANG-LAI

is at present Professor of Chinese in Georgetown University in Washington. He received his M.A. degree at Harvard, and was for a year connected with the Chinese Delegation to the League of Nations. Later he was Professor of English and Philosophy in the University of Nankai in China.

HAROLD GOLDER

is now in Europe on a Sheldon Fellowship which he received at Harvard. He served with the Marine Corps for two years, but since 1920 has been almost continuously at Harvard.

ARNOLD WHITRIDGE

is an Assistant Professor of English in Columbia University. He is the author of Critical Ventures in Modern French Literature. But Mr. Whitridge is well known to our readers.

AMY LOWELL

was so frequent a contributor to this REVIEW that now, near the anniversary of her death, it is most fitting to publish this poem so trenchantly descriptive of her New England.

ROSCOE C. E. BROWN

is Professor in the School of Journalism at Columbia University.
For some years he was Managing Editor of The New York Tribune.
Mr. Brown was a member of the New York State Civil Service
Commission from 1905 to 1911.

HERVEY ALLEN

has for some time held, in the more sensitive critical opinion, a foremost place in the group of the younger poets. His books of verse include Wampum and Gold, The Blindman, a poem which appeared first in this REVIEW, Earth Moods, and his last volume, a diary of the Great War-Toward the Flame. ELISABETH Cutting is Managing Editor of this REVIEW. CLARENCE H. GAINES, Professor of English at St. Lawrence University, is on the editorial staff of THE NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW. JOHN T. RODGERS, a Princeton gradnate, was editorial writer on The Washington Post. WILLIS FLETCHER JOHNSON, author of America's Foreign Relations, A Century of Expansion, and other historical works, is Contributing Editor to this REVIEW.

« ÖncekiDevam »