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...only newspaper. But tucked in among columns by and for army and navy trainees--The Lucky Bag, Scuttlebut, Ward Room Topics, Specialist's Corner, Creating a Ripple, and the like--was an irregular bylined feature called "Passing the Buck," Written by the Service News first editor, Robert S. Landau '45, who later was killed in naval action in the invasion of Lingayen Gulf, the Philippines, the column attacked a "back-handed diatribe" in the Boston Herald, demanded resumption of gridiron hostilities with Yale, and said other things which made people wonder whether the Service News was as voiceless...

Author: By James G. Trager jr., | Title: The Service News: Exodus of '43 | 1/24/1973 | See Source »

...article on the Op-ed Page of The New York Times, David Landau '72 defends Dr. Kissinger's "tardiness" in ending the war. "Although Kissinger has a big brain," Landas writes, "he is semi-human like the rest of us." In a citywide ecology dragnet Cambridge police arrest six staff members of the Harvard University Gazette and book them for "willful, premeditated and repeated pollution of the area with noxious and pointless litter." Collapsing in the face of police interrogation, Harvard Publicity Director Deans Lord admits that Derek Bok, Henry Kissinger and Patrick Moynihan were her creation. "We needed some...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Year Ahead: Less of the Same | 1/4/1973 | See Source »

Archite Gwathmy was the only Crimson racquetman to loss a game, falling to Bob Landau in the second round of their match, 16-17. Sophomore Steve Mead dropped his exhibition match, 3-2. In the tenth man division, but the tenth division does not count in the team score...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Squash Team Aces Amherst; Crimson Deals a 9-0 Shutout | 12/7/1972 | See Source »

...JANUARY OF 1972. The James Montgomery Blues Band, "undoubtedly the best unrecorded (group) in the area" (Jon Landau, Phoenix, March 15, 1972) played the historic and suspicious opening of the Club Zircon in Cambridge to the kind of packed and enthusiastic audiences which had come to characteries the band. Then at the height of a predominantly local popularity and reknown, they were significantly responsible for the impetus toward interest in live blues groups--particularly local, young and white--which has been manifested recently in the emergence of such clubs as the Zircon, Joe's, and the Speakeasy in Central Square...

Author: By Ianet Nathan, | Title: Blues in Boston: An Interview with Larry Carsman | 11/16/1972 | See Source »

...films from the Institute of Politics Series, "Interview" with President Salvador Allende" by Saul Landau Haskell Wexler, and Louis Malle's Phantom India (Part I), will be screened free tonight at 7:30 in HARVARD-EPWORTH CHURCH...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard | 10/12/1972 | See Source »

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