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...Harvard Pops Orchestra is playing a free concert Sunday at the Hatch Shell in the Charles River Esplanade. They aren't the Boston Symphony, but the Harvard Pops are still nothing to sneeze at--unless you have hay fever and are allergic to outdoors concerts--and are worth a look...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUSIC | 8/9/1974 | See Source »

...living Western ways make him a prime candidate for the Lubyanka prison. Vacationing at a Caribbean resort, he meets Judith Farrow (Julie Andrews), secretary to a well-placed British official. Omar claims it is love at first sight. She thinks he is just after a quick roll in the hay. A British intelligence officer - crabbily, almost picture-savingly played by Anthony Quayle - insists that Sharif is trying to recruit her for his spy network...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Bad Intersection | 8/5/1974 | See Source »

Raymond A. Hay, 45. A persuasive salesman, the head of U.S. operations for Xerox Corp. talks with everyone from switchboard operators to branch executives while making his cross-country rounds. Among the divisions Hay oversees from headquarters in Stamford, Conn., are Xerox's Information Systems Group, Information Technology Group and Business Development Group. Born...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: 200 Faces for the Future | 7/15/1974 | See Source »

Rahsaan Roland Kirk is next door at the Jazz Workshop till the end of the weekend. Kirk is very high-energy and plays a zillion instruments, many of which you've never even heard of, often all at once. He's a giant anomaly in progressive jazz whose hay-days never seem to end. In a week less full of uniformly good stuff we'd recommend him without a second thought; he may be hard to squeeze in this week, what with Chem 20 hourlies piling up and all, but you really should catch his act at least once...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MUSIC | 7/9/1974 | See Source »

While his mother Flossie was working as a $35-a-week bookkeeper, Merle was dropping out of the ninth grade to take any job he could find-pitching hay, sacking potatoes, roughnecking it on oil rigs. He had an easy sexuality, and the girls came around without his asking, just as the "snuff queens"-the country term for groupies-swarm around him at concerts now. At 16, he set up housekeeping in Eugene, Ore., with one of the girls. It lasted three months, and when it broke up, he went back to Bakersfield on a freight. And he ran into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Lord, They've Done It All | 5/6/1974 | See Source »

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