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Rehkamp, classmate Lisa Griffin, Charles Hagedorn '83, and Rob Faulkner '83 will carry the torch for Harvard today and tonight, figure skating alongside sundry international skating luminaries such as David Santee and Toller Cranston in "An Evening With Champions"--Eliot House's annual benefit for the Jimmy (children's cancer--against it, of course) Fund...

Author: By John Rippey, | Title: A Return to the Stage | 12/5/1981 | See Source »

Several Harvard skaters will join the lineup: seniors Lisa Griffin and Marlene Rehkamp, Charlie Hagedorn '82, and Rob Faulkner...

Author: By John Rippey and Jim Silver, S | Title: Skating Stars to Light Bright | 12/1/1981 | See Source »

...fears the Marielitos will tarnish the reputation they have labored so hard to build in South Florida. "I tell my employees that if a black comes here asking for money, give it to him," says one prosperous Cuban gas station owner in Little Havana. "If an Anglo comes to rob us, give it to him. But if a Marielito comes here, kill him. I will pay for everything." The older Cubans also find themselves in a cultural and political split with the younger ones, who tend to split with the younger ones, who tend to be less conservative and less...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: South Florida: Trouble in Paradise | 11/23/1981 | See Source »

...Rob Abedon '82-3: I don't agree with the policy of negotiating from building up strength because I think that the more strength in tactical and strategic weapons one has, the more likelihood that there will be some sort of accident, either mechnical or human, and that the chances of war breaking out between the two superpowers or between other countries that may acquire the weapons or already have them is greater. Preempting negotiations by acquiring what you would like to eradicate in the other side's arsenal simply doesn't make sense...

Author: By Compiled BY Ann scott, | Title: Disarmament: A Realistic Goal? | 11/21/1981 | See Source »

...Rob Abedon '82-31 think that disarmament is not a realistic goal because the countries that have nuclear weapons have grown accustomed to the political status that these nuclear weapons give them. They would be almost impossibly reluctant to give up the status and the leverage that having these weapons give the country in world diplomacy. For example Britain and France...have much greater diplomatic status in the world than their economic or political status would be without (nuclear weapons). Therefore, countries will not give up their weapons completely, although they may put a freeze on production or limit...

Author: By Compiled BY Ann scott, | Title: Disarmament: A Realistic Goal? | 11/21/1981 | See Source »

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