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...have some good players coming up from the J. V. who deserve to play I'm glad to see John Moore win a varsity game," coach Dave Fish said after the match...

Author: By Bark S. Goodman, | Title: Racquetmen Squash MIT, 9-0, Rebound From Princeton Defeat | 2/9/1982 | See Source »

...seemed more pleased with the outcome of the Haig-Gromyko talks than did the participants. Reflecting a widespread relief that relations between the superpowers appeared to be ever so slightly improved, a West German newspaper declared: "At least they're talking to each other again." The Europeans were glad that the superpowers had committed themselves to a matter of primary European concern: the negotiations on theater nuclear weapons. Even the length of the talks gave the Europeans a bit of comfort. After all, remarked an Italian nuclear-arms expert, "if you only want to exchange insults, five minutes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Diplomacy: Is Anyone Out There Listening? | 2/8/1982 | See Source »

...crises in Frances' life happen offstage or that so much time is spent with peripheral characters about whom one could not care less. The language bruises the ear, ricocheting between period brassiness ("There's one slick bozo," "There's this bimbo there givin' me the glad eye") to sorry flights of pseudopoetic home truths. On the other hand, the nickelodeon-like music of Claibe Richardson tickles the ear. Apart from Dunaway, the only one who threatens to run away with the show is Designer John Lee Beatty, whose delightfully real open-air trolley car crisscrosses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Nostalgia Nut | 2/8/1982 | See Source »

...Roosevelt the New York governor, and only 30 years removed from the Oval Office. Buried in one editorial calling for more lectures on campus about politics, there is this prophetic sentence--"There must be many among us who, whether or not of a voting age, would be more than glad to gain knowledge by actual experience of the intricacies of federal, state and municipal politics...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: Roosevelt and The Crimson | 1/29/1982 | See Source »

Construction at the Harvard football stadium is delayed for several years when a worker eating lunch accidentally leans against one of the cement stanchions and topples the north face of the concrete edifice. "I'm awful glad no one brushed up against that during the Yale game," athletic director John P. Reardon says...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 'Hit Squads' From the Quad | 1/15/1982 | See Source »

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