Word: kaufmans
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Also fed up was U.A.W.'s President Roland J. Thomas who accused Guild Vice President Milton Kaufman of "irresponsible action," said Kaufman had egged on North American strikers "in direct opposition to the advice of President Murray (of the C.I.O.)." Said Thomas: "The members of the U.A.W.-C.I.O. consider your action a presumptuous and completely unwarranted interference in the affairs of a C.I.O. union which has always been . . . well able to protect the interests of its own membership...
This Hart-Kaufman stage-smash has hit the road and returned to the scene of its first triumph. Replete with an excellent cast headed by Alexander Woollcott and lines which are still definitely this year's model, "The Man Who Came to Dinner" is a funnybone feat calling for second and third helpings...
...vastly disproportionate amount of America's playwriting energy is expended upon the satirical or farcical comedy dealing with the vicissitudes of cafe or literary society life. A good deal of it is sheer waste, and its authors would do better shoveling coal. Kaufman and Hard are among the few who can make good theatre out of nothing more than witty lines and superficial characterizations and plots. The second act of "The Man Who Came to Dinner" shows both the art and the artists at their best; they play may easily be the masters' masterpiece. It's an unbeatble laxative...
...Clifford, EndicottRichard G. Robinson Peggy Heller, New York, N. Y.Alan C. Tindal Barbara Brackett, Connecticut CollegeJohn W. Torrey Miriam Welgold, University of ConnecticutCharles R. Weaver Jean Parrish, Mt. HolyokeWIGGLESWORTH HALLRobert R. Albers Clare Foster, RadcliffeStuart M. Behringer Marjorie Galway, Pine ManorRobert L. Bernstein Barbara Gans, CornellWythe M. Bogy Anne Kaufman, Dalton SchoolMurray Bovarnick Betty Finkel, BrooklineJames A. Brink Mary Harman, Katherine GibbsWorthington Campbell, Jr. Mary Louise King, WinsorCharles J. Cawley Priscilla Taylor, Mt. IdaChester L. Churchill, Jr. Marilyn Morse, BeaverThomas Cowen Edith Allen, WinsorJoseph W. Cummings Mary Miller, LincolnJames F. Dickason Elizabeth Taylor, WellesleyRichard N. Eckert Margaret Camp, WellesleyWilliam...
...fiction, is also the most articulate critic of her accusers. Twelve years on the Mirror, she was a charter Guild organizer, a militant member of the Executive and Grievance Committees. She changed her mind last summer when 18 Mirror Guildsmen unsuccessfully petitioned the National Convention to oust Executives Milton Kaufman and Victor Pasche. Then began the rebel movement for the A.F. of L. American Newspaper Writers Association. A war of nerves followed at the Mirror...