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Writer

Dwight Cramer

Latest Content

Such, Such Were the Joys

Peter Prescott came to Harvard last week to shill his most recent book, A Darkening Green, which purports to be

A Drinking Man's Guide to Cambridge

B EFORE NOON, Cambridge is not a comfortable town to drink in. But, making it past that hour, it is

Dwight on the Town

When people first found out I was going trout fishing in New Hampshire, they told me I ought to check

Dwight on the Town

"Where is the baseline?" "There isn't one." "What do you mean, there isn't one?" "The goddamned court is so worn

The Name of the Game

M OST PEOPLE are not really worth talking or writing about. The people who are the subjects of Time Inc.'s

The Dangling Conversationalist

B EACH'S OLD GIRL friend kept trying to tell him about her first day at boarding school, what she had

Partners In Rhyme

There once was a prosperous lawyer A trust-laden corporate Tom Sawyer The thrust of his life, Was not to his

Cutting the Old School Tie

B EACH BEGAN TO worry about the impression he was making on the freshman woman his roommate had dated on

I'd Rather French-Kiss the Blob

T HE HASTY PUDDING Show is the kind of thing that lives on its precedents, since no post-Freudian group of

Heat On The Summer School

The heat from last summer was still on Thomas E. Crooks '49, director of the Summer School, this week. A

Another Million From Japan

Harvard received another 1 million gift for the proposed Japan Institute when Takes hi Tasuka, Japan's ambassador to the United

Merry Christmas, Ho Ho Ho

G REETINGS TO ALL, far and near; An overfull dose of Christmas Cheer. The lights are dim, the heat is

Walking Across the Water

P HILIP SCHORSH, son of a German tycoon, hippie-radical, deportee from the United States, Harvard Business School student, and cause

Washington: The Lieutenants After Dark

T HE MEN IN Ward Just's short stories are mostly bureaucrats. Not exactly masters of their own fate, they do

Vice, Presidents and Murder

B ENEDICT ARNOLD'S classical treason and Aaron Burr's sinister plotting are as integral a part of American tradition as Nathan

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