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...flexible than Brown. He believes that "the key to coaching is to do what your personnel dictates, not try to force your system on them." Also, Shula's pupils get to graduate: Griese and Morrall call their own plays, something not even the great Otto Graham in his heyday as quarterback for the Cleveland Browns could persuade Brown...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miami's Unmiraculous Miracle Worker | 12/11/1972 | See Source »

...Jeson's sake, David has tagged along skeptically, ever bashfully peering through smudged glasses and trailing a dowdy muffer, But jason turns out to be a second rate front men for a black mobster and is out. Smarted in a shady real estate deal. Sally realizes that her conquette heyday has long since passed and panic brings her to borderline insanity. The sexually insecure David wallows in nervous in-irosprection, and lets the dream linger too long. For Sally hysterically plows four bullets into jason, and David returns to his radio...

Author: By Emily Fisher, | Title: Marvin Gardens | 11/28/1972 | See Source »

...expressed; the worst of cowboy life is represented by the roping of mustangs to sell to dogfood and glue factories. Rosalie, top cowboy Gay's gal, objects to this cruelty. Would she have raised a ruckus about the meaninglessness of Gay's life had he lived in a cowboy heyday and been able to profitably hunt and trap, or shoot Indians and harass settlers, or drive cattle instead? We'll never know. Marilyn Monroe and Clark Gable star: Montgomery Clift steals the show as a jelly-brained rodeo rider. The mustang scenes are good action...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: the screen | 11/22/1972 | See Source »

Though it operated in the shadow of the more prestigious New York City papers, the News sometimes rivaled them in its heyday. In 1932 its city editor, Henry Coit, was the first to report that Charles Lindbergh had paid a ransom to the kidnaper of his son. News Correspondent Cecil I. Dorrian was the first woman to file dispatches from the front lines in World War I. Correspondent Arthur J. Sinnott had such a pipeline to President Woodrow Wilson that the capital press corps formally protested the long string of major exclusives. The paper's coverage of state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Death in Newark | 9/11/1972 | See Source »

Since the CRR hearing, the protests have quieted down, largely because SDS began to realize their Herrnstein campaign had almost no support among the student body. SDS itself has degenerated since its heyday in the late sixties into little more than a noisy splinter group, enjoying little if any student support...

Author: By Peter Shapiro, | Title: A Spring of Rekindled Activism | 9/1/1972 | See Source »

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