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...Radcliffe heavyweight crew displayed awesome raw power this spring in thundering to impressive victories over MIT, Dartmouth, BU, NU, Princeton, Cornell and Yale. But at the Eastern Sprints championships on Connecticut's Lake Waramug, the heavies' comeback effort fell just short and they wound up second a fraction of a second behind an upstart Penn boat...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Ruling the Waves | 6/5/1980 | See Source »

Eventually, the proposal wound its way through the Appropriations Committee, but not without carrying an amendment by Sen. Mark O. Hatfield (R-Ore.) asking registrants whether they would be conscientious objectors...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sign 'em Up, Ship 'em Out | 6/5/1980 | See Source »

...theater and started annoying a couple of Cambridge cops for whom they had little respect. More cops appeared and more students. The taunts continued. One officer used his stick on one fellow and the riot began. It lasted well into the night and a lot of boys wound up in jail, some of them hurt quite badly. It was a big story for the Herald next morning and for the Transcript and the Traveler in the afternoon...

Author: By Karl S. Nash, | Title: 50 Years Later, the Gang's All Here | 6/3/1980 | See Source »

...least the action at Rocks Road, where the Harvard/Radcliffe affinity groups had all wound up along with some "old-style Clams from the Seacoast," was nonviolent. We had even patterned our blockade on an antiwar protest by Vietnamese Buddhists. We grumbled about CDAS, and how they were alienating people rather than reaching out to them. They were making the issue our violence and not the violence of the nuclear industry, and the concern for consensus and fair process and sensitivity was getting lost in the need for efficiency and tactical coordination. It was a clear case of nonviolenter-than-thou...

Author: By Eric B. Fried, | Title: The Road Not Taken | 6/2/1980 | See Source »

...Pepper had come back, as he had had to many times before. Last week, following his engagement at Fat Tuesday's and at clubs in such other cities as Philadelphia and Washington, he wound up a rare swing through the East with a performance for the Atlanta Jazz Alliance. He had a first-rate trio in tow: Pianist Milcho Leviev, Bassist Bob Magnusson and Drummer Carl Burnett. His repertory ranged brilliantly over a variety of moods and rhythms, from standards (What Is This Thing Called Love?) to appealing originals (Ophelia, Blues for Blanche), and from wistful ballads (Over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: What Dues He Had to Pay | 5/26/1980 | See Source »

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