Word: hewlett
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...same year the Hasty Pudding Dramatic Association was formed, so that the producers could squeeze out enough capital for another road trip. This inno vation was described by Roger S. Hewlett '33 as "really only a character on paper to legitimize the theatricals and to avoid the government taxes." "1776", the next year's show, evidently profited from the merger as it embarked on one of the most ambitious Pudding tours ever. It played to audiences in Boston, Northampton, Cleveland, Buffalo, Pittsburgh, and Detroit...
...loudest champions of Britain's workingman, Dr. Hewlett Johnson, "Red Dean" of Canterbury Cathedral, was in the embarrassing predicament of a big employer with a wage dispute on his hands. Early this year Party-Liner Johnson's choristers, restricted to part-time outside jobs because they must warble Evensong at 3:15 p.m. five days a week, asked for a pay hike from $675 a year to $1,000. No strike was threatened, but Dr. Johnson and his chapter cohorts thumbed down the raise, summarily suspended the choristers' spokesman on a handy pretext. Last week, with...
...reported in the July 11 issue on Canterbury's continuing embarrassment over its irremovable dean, the Very Rev. Dr. Hewlett Johnson. Poor Elizabeth! Poor Anglicans! Poor Dean Johnson ! Elizabeth, though head of the church, can't remove the dean-much as she might like to-and neither can anyone else . . . Anglicans must listen to him willy-nilly...
...Very Rev. Dr. Hewlett Johnson, "Red Dean" of England's Canterbury Cathedral, has long managed to maintain a strict distinction between pulpit and soapbox. Last week, for the first time, the Red Dean decided to move his soapbox into church...
...quit the theater, did free-lance writing until 1944, when he joined TIME'S staff. Since, he has written 19 covers, six on show business. "I love the theater," said Editor Hewlett, "but I'm glad to be on the outside looking in. I also like to make a living...