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...Ford has no enemies in the House," Rep. Charles W. Sandman Jr. (R-N.J.) told interviewers last night. Rep. Lawrence Hogan (R-Md.) Sandman's colleague on the House Judiciary Committee, said that Ford was "the ideal choice to take up the baton of leadership right...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Congress Looks Ahead After Nixon Resignation | 8/9/1974 | See Source »

Alfred the Great, part one of Israel Horovitz's still-evolving Wakefield Trilogy, is being produced this week by the Trinity Sq. Repertory Company. Trinity Rep thinks it's taking a big chance on this one because they think Bostonians will only go for the star-studded big-name shows. They like the Red Sox, though, so maybe there's no risk. Richard Kneeland, who stars as Alfred, is reportedly a marvelous actor. Horovitz, you might remember, became a victim of post-Watergate morality after The Crimson revealed that a Harvard degree he said he had was a fake. Horovitz...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STAGE | 8/6/1974 | See Source »

...Summer School Repertory Theater's next-to-last production of the season, begins its first weekend of performances this week, and if you like Shaw you'll certainly like the current production at the Loeb. Crimson informers report that the show is not as slickly done as the Summer Rep's first two plays, and there are a number of rough spots in this treatment of the theatrically difficult farce--but on the whole there's a lot of fun to be had at the Loeb. Liz Samuels's review, no doubt witty and insightful, appears on page...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STAGE | 8/2/1974 | See Source »

...School Repertory Theater has decided to make the Bernard Shaw play its second-to-last production of the season, probably because of its nominal connection with the women's liberation issue. They'll have to play this one as it lays, and it's hardly certain that the Summer Rep will be able to do very much with Shaw's trifling little comedy. The group's track record is pretty good so far, though, and all hope is not lost. Any play that has people falling out of airplanes into glass houses--unscathed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STAGE | 7/30/1974 | See Source »

...more outspoken opponents of the centers was Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.), a frequent contributor to last year's eleven-hour debate on the bill in the House of Representatives. "When we pass a bill to provide legal aid for the poor," she asked her fellow representatives, "does it mean that we should also finance, using millions of dollars, research centers aimed solely at changing social policy? The Harvard research center actually had attorneys, who were paid with OEO funds, doing the research which led to their joining as co-sponsors with the NAACP in the Detroit segregation case... Meanwhile...

Author: By Michael Massing, | Title: Legal Services: The Cutting Edge Is Blunted | 7/23/1974 | See Source »

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