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...interview with The Crimson here Saturday, Kirk said he was "dismayed" that the French ,'have gone ahead [with nuclear testing] in spite of opposition from several nations...

Author: By Richard H.P. Sia, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: New Zealand Leader Opposes Future French Nuclear Tests | 8/2/1973 | See Source »

HONOLULU, Hawaii--Norman E. Kirk, prime minister of New Zealand, vowed last week to do "everything possible" to end further French nuclear testing in the South Pacific...

Author: By Richard H.P. Sia, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: New Zealand Leader Opposes Future French Nuclear Tests | 8/2/1973 | See Source »

Newport-New England. Friday: War, Ray Charles, Herbie Mann, the Staple Singers, and Billy Paul. Saturday: Donny Hathaway, B.B. King, Freddie Hubbard, Charles Mingus, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, and Stevie Wonder. At Fenway Park, July 27 and 28. Tickets...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: music | 7/27/1973 | See Source »

...places like the Sheep Meadow and Fenway Park. All that considered, this year's local festival shapes up well indeed. The key evening is Saturday, because Stevie Wonder and B.B. King more or less top a bill of giants: Mingus, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and his Quintet, Rahsaan Roland Kirk and the Vibration Society, and mellow man Donny Hathaway. The problem of course is Fenway Park, cozy for baseball, but cavernous for jazz. I saw McCarthy there in '68 and the sound was rotten. This is 1973 though, and when Led Zep can fill Kezar Stadium in San Francisco, while making...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: music | 7/27/1973 | See Source »

...Lonely Are the Brave. Kirk Douglas stars in a story of an old-fashioned cowboy caught in the gaping maw of mechanization and impersonalized society. The symbolism ranges from movingly sensitive to absurdly overstated, and the ending is painfully obvious, although not out of place. Walter Matthau is the country sherrif who has little desire to contribute to the immoral badgering of a man whom he respects in a more atavistic than human way, but he is too much a part of the oppression to remove himself from it. Matthau's commentary as he watches the same dog take...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: television | 7/10/1973 | See Source »

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