Word: grossfeld
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Other fellows include Stan Grossfeld, 39, associate editor of The Boston Globe; Elizabeth Leland, 36, reporter for The Charlotte Observer; Melissa Ludtke, 39, Boston-based correspondent for Time-Life News Service; and Marilyn Milloy, 34, Atlanta bureau chief for Newsday...
American gymnastics has taken a giant flip backward since 1984. The team that won 16 medals in Los Angeles is unlikely to win any in Seoul. What happened? East bloc athletes aside, the difference is injuries, inexperience and infighting. Men's Coach Abie Grossfeld admits that "1984 was special. We won't have a group like that again...
...favorite for a 10 if he performs sixth in the rotation, went third during the finals to boost the score for his teammates. The successful completion of his patented Gaylord II earned a 9.95 and, more important, made Daggett's 10 possible. U.S. Men's Coach Abie Grossfeld sums it up: "We won because our fourth, fifth and sixth guys were better than theirs...
...social conscience, won for "special" (usually investigative) local reporting on race relations. One series criticized institutions, including the Globe, for poor minority hiring, and concluded, "Boston today is the hardest metropolitan area in America for a black person to hold a job or earn a promotion." News Photographer Stan Grossfeld, 32, won for portraits of suffering citizens in Lebanon...
...gold medal since 1960- that many of the difficult tricks bear the names of the Japanese gymnasts who invented them. But a solid Soviet team, led by Ditiaid, 22, and the exciting Tkachev, 22, may change the language of men's gymnastics. Says former U.S. Olym pian Muriel Grossfeld: "The Soviets are superb, awesome under pressure. At least five of the six Soviet men can do [tricks] only one or two could do last year. It's amazing that a team could have that kind of depth...