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PENN-BROWN - You've got to hand it to Len Jardine for sticking it out as Brown football coach when you consider that his only good running back flunked out last Spring, the Brown admissions department hasn't recruited enough talent to produce a winning team since 1959, and Brown has now lost 13 games in a row. That is, until you remember that if Jardine quit with his won-lost record, he couldn't find a job coaching field hockey at Pine Manor. At least Jardine used to have the consolation of looking forward to the annual battle...

Author: By Evan W. Thomas, | Title: On the Bench | 10/7/1972 | See Source »

...involved in Vietnam. Sutherland reports a battle with the Viet Cong as if it were a traditional football game ("They are the home team, you know"); four women members of the troupe do a song-and-dance about their liberation from service to the military men; folksinger Len Chandler leads the audience of servicemen and women in a handclapping rendition of "My Ass is Mine" or something with a similarly didactic title...

Author: By Barry Levine, | Title: "Fuck the Army" | 8/1/1972 | See Source »

...Len Decrux did not come from a poor mining family like Mortimer, but an upper-class British background. He too spent his life in the labor movement, mostly as a Labor reporter. His "personal history." entitled labor Radical, tells the story of the CIO, its creation as a force for an independent labor movement and its demise as another...

Author: By Tom Crane, | Title: CIO-UAW Fight | 5/17/1972 | See Source »

Lunar Transformations. Graphic interpretations of the surface of the moon, by Len Gittleman. Part of "Transformations" a major exhibition of faculty work. Carpenter Center, through...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: exhibits | 5/11/1972 | See Source »

...performances by and large doggedly recreate the characters' hopelessly grim environment--even at the cost of a few emotional deadends. Leigh Montayne takes the part of Len and turns it into a believable, if curiously passive portrait of a nice guy just too intent on finishing last. In contrast, as his rival Fred, Frank W. Leupold enters a stylish, occasionally overly malignant performance. As Mary, the mother of Len's girlfriend, Nora Jacobson is most convincing, a catch-all of stray hairs and wasted spirits. Rounding out the household. Lynne Breslin and Richard Christenson are no less relenting...

Author: By Gregg J. Kilday, | Title: Saved | 5/8/1972 | See Source »

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