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...board this train," intoned James I B. Sherwood, "should be an event...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: The Once and Future Train | 8/30/1982 | See Source »

...about Hamilton, Ohio. But, as Peter Davis fairly screams early on Hometown is really about America, not just Hamilton Calling on the tradition of anthropological and literary studies of single American towns as microcosms of the national condition--particularly Robert and Helen Lynd's work on Muncie. Indiana and Sherwood Anderson's imagined Winesbury, Ohio--Davis conceived Hometown as the latest of these metaphorical excursions. But Davis is neither anthropologist nor novelist...

Author: By Jeffrey R. Toobin, | Title: Where the Heart Is | 4/12/1982 | See Source »

...colleges plan to establish the exchange on a regular basis with shout 10 Wellesley coeds living at MIT, and a similar number of MIT undergrads going to Wellesley each term. Robert A. Sherwood MIT'S associate dean for student's affairs, said yesterday...

Author: By Compiled FROM College newspapers, | Title: Wellesly Exchange | 2/13/1982 | See Source »

Nevertheless, Pythonic curveballs keep the movie accessible for adults. Sherwood Forest teems with spit, snot, and dismembered limbs. John Cleese is a lively, simpleton "Hood," distributing art treasures to the downtrodden. "Do you know the poor? I'm sure you'd like them!" he insists with comic-book eyebrows. Michael Palin and Shelley Duvall, in dual roles as lovers across two eras, provide additional satire on old movies, with a touch of the absurd: Palin, in desperate search for a cure to his vague sexual problem, blurts out, "I must have fruit!" This can mean anything; Python at its best...

Author: By --david M. Handelman, | Title: A Victim of the Modern Age | 11/6/1981 | See Source »

Woollcott's best-remembered enterprise was the founding of the Algonquin Round Table, a grand gathering of playwrights, critics, writers and comics. Dorothy Parker, George S. Kaufman, Robert Benchley were all there; the Marx Brothers dropped by occasionally. Sherwood Anderson and Moss Hart were frequently in attendance. Knowing that anything witty would be printed, repeated and quoted, Woolcott directed the conversation toward the four topics that interested him: "Theater, friends, murder and anything else that interests me." The Round Table flourished. Only the flight of New York's sharpest tongues to Hollywood forced it to disband in the late 1930s...

Author: By Laura K. Jereski, | Title: The Broadest Wit | 10/24/1981 | See Source »

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