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...Theodore Lambros, The Townie Who Grew Up In The Shadow Of The Yard But Loves Harvard Anyway...

Author: By Marie B. Morris, | Title: Stranger Than Truth | 5/1/1985 | See Source »

Harvard, a university whose gates predate modern science, probably could use its engineering process to facilitate such mass morning exoduses. But in the shadow of sweeping improvements like renovating the Quad and spraying the Yard with an unidentifiable green substance, the little things sometimes get overlooked...

Author: By John Rosenthal, | Title: Of Waffles and T-Bones | 4/29/1985 | See Source »

...this day, almost a year ago now, Tom Seaver was warming up in the bullpen in Fenway Park. He was still on his first tour of the American League and was making his first appearance in the shadow of the venerable Green Monster...

Author: By Nick Wurf, | Title: Thirty-Nine and Still Stalking the Perfect Delivery | 4/26/1985 | See Source »

...must fight for a value system, we must not put money above morals and economics above ethics," Jackson shouted to a roaring crowd in the Yard. "Rise up America, let the light of freedom shine, and nothing compromised to the lurking shadow apartheid. Rise up America, give our youth a reason to live. Rise up America, do justice, love mercy and walk only before our God. Rise up America, give me you tired, your poor, your huddled masses who have earned the right to breathe free. Rise up America, red, yellow, brown, Black and white. Rise up America...

Author: By Joseph F Kahn, | Title: Take the Moral High Road | 4/23/1985 | See Source »

...broader way, Flaubert's Parrot also reflects the strange relationship with French culture that the British have always had, a profound--and mostly unreciprocated--appreciation existing under the shadow of centuries-old contempt and mistrust. (It's no mistake that France 1848-1945. The best and most comprehensive book on French culture, should have been written by an Oxford professor, Theodore Zeldin.) Braithwalie is a Gallophile as only an Englishman can be, revelling in the wine-tasting, the pharmacies, the road signs, the myriad facets of everyday, life with a delight unmediated by the ever-present chauvinism of the French...

Author: By Jean- CHRISTOPHER Castelli, | Title: This Bird Has Hown | 4/22/1985 | See Source »

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