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Guts. Amid all the talk of replacing Eagleton, he kept insisting that he would bow out if McGovern wanted him to but that McGovern was still behind him. At one time Eagleton promised to telephone his doctors and ask them if they could make a statement about his health (he never did). While he was in Honolulu, there came another blow-which, in the unlikely event Eagleton survives, could well turn out to be what saved his candidacy. Washington Columnist Jack Anderson asserted on his daily Mutual broadcast that he had "located photostats of half a dozen arrests" of Eagleton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CAMPAIGN: McGovern's First Crisis: The Eagleton Affair | 8/7/1972 | See Source »

...hardly looks like the usual equipage for a bishop who was a slum priest and marched at Selma: a 70-ft., three-bedroom, three-bath cabin cruiser anchored in San Francisco Bay, its brass-filigreed bow and mahogany-planked deck gleaming in the sun. But for California's boat-loving C. Kilmer Myers, the Daring will serve as a year-round home-and Myers is paying the reported $50,000 price out of his own pocket. When Myers was elected to the see of California in 1966, after the resignation of the late James A. Pike, he inherited...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Tidings | 8/7/1972 | See Source »

...Only half as many rowers died before age 60 as did nonrowers. Prout dramatized his thesis by digging up a picture of the Harvard junior varsity crew that won at Henley-on-Thames in 1914. He managed 50 years later to round up every one of them-including then Bow Oar Senator Leverett Saltonstall-and boated the whole crew in a shell on the same course. Incidentally, not one of them had developed an unmanageable paunch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Capsules, Jul. 31, 1972 | 7/31/1972 | See Source »

...eight-oared shell itself is colored 67 per cent Crimson. Brothers Mike '71 and Cleve '69 Livingston will row at bow and 2, Frits '69 and Bill '71 Hobbs are at 5 and 6, Terry, a 175-pound metronome will stroke, and Paul Hoffman '69, who enraged stolid U.S. Olympic officials with his support of the black athlete protest in 1968, will be coxswain. Two other Harvard oarsmen, lightweight stroke Tony Brooks and heavyweight captain Dave Sawyier, will go to Munich either as members of the four-with-cox or as spares...

Author: By John L. Powers, | Title: New U.S. Olympic Team Has Old Crimson Crew | 7/11/1972 | See Source »

...more notable ones will be reviewed in these pages in later issues. A cup of coffee can be a pleasant way to end a day or break up an evening's work, and the Square offers some comfortable, quiet places to sip and talk. The Pamplona (on Bow St. next to the Underdog) and the Window Shop (56 Brattle St.) are outdoor cafes--the Pamplona's chocolate mousse is very good. Grendel's Den (on Boylston St. across from the Hungry Persian) is a pleasant basement coffee house with canned music and arab food...

Author: By Elizabeth Samuels, | Title: HARVARD SQUARE | 7/3/1972 | See Source »

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