Writer
Gideon Gil
Latest Content
Acosta Coasts
While everyone else was getting blitzed last Friday night. Harvard's handball all-American, Danny Acosta, was down at the local "Y"
There Aren't No Lectures To Be Heard
This past week parodies of two of the country's rags rolled off the presses to a chorus of laughter and
Gems for the Jaded
I've been a senior for less than a month but already I'm sick of it. The toga parties and all
From the Inane to the International
"Welcome back to school kids. For your first homework assignment, I want you to write an essay on what you
Fighting to Make a Name for Himself
The candidate glances apprehensively at his watch, grimacing when he realizes he is running 15 minutes behind schedule. His advance
Old Ghosts and a Bow from the Crackerjack King
During last week's demonstrations, marches and sit-outs to protest Harvard's support of apartheid, an image of myself as a scrawny
No Snappy Titles
With the controversy over last week's television series on the Holocaust still simmering, the appearance here of Telford Taylor, the
Phone Snafu
Twelve of the over 500 Harvard and Cambridge phones that were kicked out of service Sunday morning by a computer
Witcover Uncovers
Damn! My birthday is this weekend. So why am I so upset? I should be happy because I'll be 21
Professor Grinspoon Will Seek Liberalization of Cocaine Laws
A Harvard professor will call this afternoon at a symposium for the liberalization of laws restricting the use of cocaine.
The Bane of Our Futures
February is a month for honoring great lecturers. Earlier this week we celebrated the birthday of Abe Lincoln, a great
Underspin and Funding Trouble Ping Pong Team
"IN THE BEGINNING, God '00 created the heavens and the earth." Most people know this is the first line of
A New Academic Debate
Several members of the academic community have charged this week that an outsiders committee headed by a Harvard professor which
CIA Evaluation of Soviet Military Goals Causes Controversy Among Observers
The just-completed CIA estimate of long-range Soviet military goals prepared with aid from an outsiders committee headed by a Harvard
Palms Out For Henry
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger '50 hasn't forgotten his academic origins. At least this was the hope of President