Word: arboreal
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Today Collins, who was bypassed in the draft of Wheel players, spends his days doing chores around his future in-laws' house in Ann Arbor. Soon he will take a job with Vic Tanny. And Ted Wheeler? As he heads to Chicago, he is just glad that his football activities will no longer be confined to watching the B.C. Lions on TV. They are fighting for first place in the Western Conference of the Canadian league...
...largest and most aggressive is The Research Group Inc., with offices in Cambridge, Mass., Ann Arbor, Mich., and Charlottesville, Va.-all cities with major university law libraries. The Group gears its services to smaller firms, which constitute an important market; about three-quarters of the private attorneys in the U.S. work in offices that have three lawyers or fewer...
...other cities with large university populations, students became involved in local campaigns--in Berkeley, Madison and Ann Arbor they elected radical city governments. Cambridge City Councilor Saundra Graham may have had something like that in mind for her Grass Roots Organization, but the GRO's candidates--except for her--did miserably their first time out. Individual Harvard students have gone in to electoral politics quite frequently--McGovern's pre-convention pollsters in 1972 were Harvard seniors--and back in 1968, Harvard students ran an anti-war referendum campaign. But even then it was clear that Cambridge was not Berkeley. Even...
...inauguration takes a similar tack, minimizing his record (termed "far to the right of center") because, in the article's words, "whatever limitations that record may suggest...there is little question that Mr. Ford brings a dogged determination to the Oval Office. From the playing fields of Ann Arbor to the grinding hours he logged in Air Force Two serving the Republican party and defending its leader, Mr. Ford has displayed enduring grit." ("Let them eat grit," Marie Antoinette once said...
This, say Jim Baumohl and Henry Miller, is a chain of ghettos stretching across the nation's college towns from Cambridge, Mass., via Ann Arbor, Mich., and Madison, Wis., to Santa Barbara and Berkeley, Calif. The youths who wander from one tolerant university town to the next are "street people," who bear a superficial resemblance to the hippies of the late '60s. Yet unlike the flower children (of whom only a few remain), the new group of itinerant youths have not rejected the Establishment out of ideological beliefs. They are authentically poor, and though most say they want...