Word: dicks
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...party last week, all the old gang puffed up four flights to the East Side editorial walkup. Dressing as distinctively as they write, Columnist Jimmy Breslin appeared with open collar and untied tie, Writer Tom Wolfe in a white suit over a blue paisley shirt, Pop Critic Dick Goldstein with a Beatles haircut, boots and an "Indo-Russian embroidered jacket." They were joined by two new staffers, Lady-Writ-er-About-Town Gloria Steinem and Mafia Watcher Peter Maas. Harold Clurman will review plays for the revived magazine, Judith Crist, movies. George Hirsch, who came from TIME-LIFE International...
...since Princeton's Dick Kazmaier won the Heisman Trophy in 1951 has an Ivy League football player so captured the public fancy as has Dowling, a 6-ft. 2-in., 195-lb. junior from Cleveland Heights, Ohio, who turned down 100 scholarship offers to go to Yale-because, as his father put it: "Why go cabin class when you can go first class?" With Brian at quarterback, says a teammate, "You never know what's going to happen-but you know that you're not going to lose...
...Weiss, Chris Burns, and Dave Vitale were thrown together freshman year a floor above Dick Manchester in Grays West--the Holworthy of the South Yard in 1964. Bob Brooks, who had roomed with a Crimson reporter in Hollis, linked up with those four as they headed for Eliot House. A sophomore detour in Claverly Hall landed them next to two legitimate Holworthys, Marshall Goldberg and Mike Hallock. The next year they moved to Eliot's K entry, and with a couple of sidekicks thrown in have controlled the third floor for two years...
Sophomore goalie Dick Locksley, who was expected to be back last week, still has a very sore shoulder and probably won't be ready for the Brown contest. Ivy Soccer Standings W L T Brown 4 0 1 Penn 3 0 2 Harvard 3 1 1 Cornell 3 1 1 Yale 2 2 1 Princeton 1 4 0 Columbia 0 4 1 Dartmouth...
Fortunately for Harvard neither Yale or Navy had the depth necessary to take the race. Right in back of Heyburn, although well back of the leaders were Harvard's Tim McLoone, "son of Joe," and Dick Howe. But Yale's and Navy's fourth and fifth men were nowhere to be seen...