David McNicoll, “Where others failed, Lang laid them in the aisles,” The Bulletin, March 21, 1978, p. 39, short excerpt. Talks about a Lang Hancock speech at the International Press Institute Assembly held in Canberra the fortnight prior.

Watching the Japanese delegates, as they sat with their interpreting earphones on, proved one of the diversions of the conference. A group of us switched our gaze to them whenever anything light-hearted, outrageous, or particularly controversial was said. They never cracked — not a smile, not a frown, not a look of puzzlement … But Lang Hancock got them. His outrageous (but often bang-on) dissertation about what he would do if he ran the country had the Japanese delegates rocking with laughter, nudging and nodding. Hancock stories will be the big goer at Tokyo dinner parties for a long time to come … I particularly liked Lang Hancock’s description of Sydney-Melbourne-Canberra — “The Bermuda Triangle.”