Writer

John R. W. small

Latest Content


The Crimson Bookshelf

The devoted admirer of any particularly good or successful book, especially in the field of humor, awaits with apprehension the


The Playgoer

Frankie Addams is a twelve-year-old girl who does not belong. To put it in her own words, delivered tremolo at


Seven Days to Noon

The weakness, and at the same time the strength, of Seven Days to Noon is that it is not a


Satire Gone to Seed

There are two types of satirist. One, who may be called the responsible satirist, looks at a particular action or


Fanny: Prude and Witty Novelist

To those who have ever read a book of Fanny Burney's I bow. To those who dare challenge the statement


Wall Around the Ghetto

In the story of the Great Ghetto of Warsaw under the Nazis there lies enough pathos to sate any man.


'53 Far from Set for Grid Opener at Andover Today

Exuding all the confidence of a coach who met his team for the first time 10 days ago. Henry Lamar


Wylie Puts Good Ideas Into Cheap Novel--'Opus 21'

Opus 21, by Phllip Wylie, Rinehart and Co, New York, 375 pp. Few authors are so serious about expounding their


Lacrosse Team Takes To Outdoors

There are some mighty penetrating breezes sweeping over the Business School practice field these days as lacrosse coach Bruce Munro