On Henry Torrey as physicist and friend. Lunches in Central Square during the Radiation Lab days. Pound’s physics degree earned at University of Buffalo, where his father was a physics professor. Rabi’s and Zacharias’ and A. G. Hill’s roles as superiors and mentors in Radiation Lab days and in early NMR work. Story of Pound’s visit to Frisch and Meitner in Cambridge, UK. Story of Frisch and Weisskopf’s visit to Pound’s home in Arlington and their piano playing. Van Vleck and his wife as best friends. Pound’s labeling as “electronics expert” which he somewhat resented; George Pake’s letter to Pound on Pound as excellent physicist, not only electronics expert. Generational issues at The Radiation Lab. The Physics program in Toronto, early in the 20th century. First and only funeral Pound attended, at age four. On an ancestor and Weland, Canada. Pound’s start in amateur radio. Pound as professor at Harvard against core curriculum. Pound’s invention of “frequency locking.” Sabbatical year spent in Boulder, CO. Work habits. Enjoyment of The New Yorker. On The Pound Box. Nuclear Quadrupole Interactions. Pound’s two sisters.