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Harv. vs. N.U. B.U. vs. B.C. BILL SCHEFT HARVARD 7-5 B.U. 3-2 JOHN DONLEY HARVARD 7-4 B.C. 6-5 FRITZ McLOUGHLIN HARVARD 6-3 B.U. 7-4 BOB GRADY HARVARD 2-1 B.U. 7-5 MIKE SAVIT NORTHEASTERN 5-3 B.U. 7-2 LAURA SCHANBERG HARVARD...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Cube Predicts | 2/6/1978 | See Source »

Some legislators and scholars are alarmed. Complains South Carolina Senator Fritz Rollings: "There are many Senators who feel that all they are doing is running around and responding to the staff. My staff fighting your staff, your staff competing with mine. Everybody is working for the staff, staff, staff, driving you nutty." Contends Norman Ornstein, political scientist at Catholic University: "The staffs have vastly increased the work load. The more staff, the more meetings, the more hearings." Admits Indiana Congressman Dan Quayle: "It's very uncomfortable to be so dependent on staff, but I have to be. Seventy-five...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: An Army of Experts Storms Capitol Hill | 1/23/1978 | See Source »

Some of the best film offerings of last fall came from the Radcliffe Quad Film Society. Showing a commercial stubborness and just about the best taste around, it was the only film society on campus that would replace probably the best silent dramatic film ever made (M., by Fritz Lang) with another Lang classic that is almost never shown--Metropolis. They're also responsible for bringing you Lubitsch's great The Blue Angel. This reading period the folks at Radcliffe are doing a retrospective of Czech New Wave films, something they did five years ago, replete with screenwriters, film makers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Exam Period on a Shot of Gin, a Couple Bucks and a Bit of Gall | 1/12/1978 | See Source »

...look at the byline to learn my legal name, but most folks at Harvard, and in the world for that matter, call me Fritz. I almost entitled my column "On the Fritz," but whatever...

Author: By Peter Mcloughlin, | Title: Tuesday Night at Watson | 11/23/1977 | See Source »

...King Vidor said a couple of weeks ago in the Times Sunday Magazine that he was surprised sound lasted back in 1929; after all, directors had made film into a great silent art form. Well, Vidor was wrong, of course, but Fritz Lang's 1923 murder story M. stands in tribute to the visual sweep and eloquence of silent film. Lang and Lubitsch made the German film industry in the 1920's the most technically brilliant and intellectually stimulating of any in the world; Lang's later Hollywood efforts were mostly cliched and dull. The movie stars the young Peter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cold War and Cold Blood | 10/13/1977 | See Source »

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