Writer
Janny P. Scott
Latest Content
Raises, Not Roses
T HERE HAVE always been professions in which low pay, bad work conditions and rapid job turnover have made sure
Lost in Translation
T HE PECULIAR characteristics of the radio medium--flexibility, intimacy and the tremendous importance of the spoken word--tend to be lost
From false ideals to modernity
The name of Stephen Spender will always be associated with those of W.H. Auden, Louis MacNiece and C. Day Lewis--the
All in the Family
Ethel Barrymore never forgave George S. Kaufman and Edna Ferber for the play that they based on her family, the
Warped Standards
I N JANUARY, 1970, Bowdoin College announced that it no longer required Scholastic Aptitude Test and Achievement Test scores from
A Recycled Cartoon
T HE REP'S PRODUCTION, and the first stage performance ever, of The Point suffers from the misbegotten mission of its
Getting the Ear of the Loeb
It is a perplexing fact that the people at the Loeb can't really say why original student work is so
Suffocating Nightmares
T HE PELICAN, not surprisingly, is one of August Strindberg's less popular works. Written by a man preparing to die,
Ho Hum
D IGGING THROUGH the fatter-than-ever course catalogue, the Humanities situation looks discouraging, at best. General Education is in a sad
To Be Is to Die
J EAN ANOUILH'S Antigone, a recreation rather than an adaptation of the Sophocles myth, explores a profound moral struggle between