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that the wide-eyed nudes have been rejected, your covers are filled with grotesque monsters. Why? . . .Wouldn't a nice dignified cover do just as well? Something that would make it stand out from the run-of-the-mill thrillers. You might caution your illustrators to use caution as to what part of a story they depict. Too often a story has been spoiled for me because the artist has 'given away' the point in his picture."


A WT Club

Allen R. Baker writes from Cleveland, Ohio: "Great as Weird Tales has proved in the past, it assumes an utterly new aspect with the announcement that the August issue contains a story by P. Schuyler Miller, Spawn. I know Miller's work; count on me for lifetime reading, if his stories are to be printed in Weird Tales. We readers in Cleveland are forming a club to discuss the stories in your unusual magazine. Readers wishing to co-operate in the formation of this club are advised to contact the undersigned immediately, for further discussion. More of Bloch! Also, waiting for Miller." [Mr. Baker's address in Cleveland is: 3562 E. 140th Street.}


The Editorial Ear

Herbert Vincent Ross writes from London, England: "Your editorial in the January issue made fine reading after the scare we all had with the change in publisher. I guess we all had the idea you were going to change the old magazine, but now we can breathe freely once again! I quite agree with you when you say: 'Any other policy would be suicidal.' It would! So Finlay is back and again the finest magazine of the weird published today lives again, and takes on some of its old 'class.' I'm afraid I'm a keen critic of anything you do and have done in the past, but please believe I intend it to be constructive and not destructive, as I know you have a pretty hard job of work to do in trying to please all of us, all of the time. You do a good job anyway, and a real democratic spirit seems to surround WT, its staff, writers and readers. What I mean is that we the readers really do feel we have a hand in things; we've only got to ask hard enough and in sufficient numbers and lo and behold the editorial ear is attuned! I still don't care for the rough