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KEITH F. SCOTT Circuit Judge Ninth Judicial Circuit Macomb...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Oct. 18, 1963 | 10/18/1963 | See Source »

...Yale organization to aid Southern students participating in segregation protests is raising $500 to help free five high school students. The students were sentenced Sept. 8 to four month prison terms for sit-in demonstrations in Macomb, Miss...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: Students Try to Help Free Demonstrators | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

...U.A.W. and its parent Michigan A.F.L.-C.I.O. (membership: 800,000) decline to say how much money they are devoting to the cause of John Swainson and John Kennedy. There are no legal limits to their spending for the virtuous civic activity of getting out the vote. In big Macomb County, for example, the union voter-recruiting army bulges into hundreds, and the A.F.L.-C.I.O. pays a bounty of 40? for every new voter. The goal is 40,000 voters, which would cost the union $16,000. On Election Day the A.F.L.-C.I.O. will pay thousands of members $25 each...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MICHIGAN: The Professor's New Course | 10/24/1960 | See Source »

Slugger Colavito, 25, is a rugged (6 ft. 3 in., 190 lbs.) lad, whose rippling biceps seem to make visible bulges on the television screen. The son of a Bronx truck driver, Rocky grew up in the shadow of Yankee Stadium, played ball just across the street in Macomb's Dam Park. Naturally, the Yankees were his boyhood heroes. Naturally, the Yankees gave him a tryout when he was only 16, but let him get away when the Indians topped the Yankees' half-hearted bid with a still modest offer of $3,000. Last year, in his second...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Four for the Rock | 6/22/1959 | See Source »

That Beu would welcome back a player guilty of grand larceny was too much for the faculty. Professors began writing the Macomb Journal all sorts of reports about the Beu administration. Beu angrily called a faculty meeting, threatened to fire all informers, ordered his professors to stop calling his players stupid. It was the professors, he said, and not the players, who were stupid. But the letters to the Journal kept right on coming in, one complaining of "the young scholars who spend their afternoons on the gridiron and their evenings with their fingers in somebody else's cashbox...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Football, Anyone? | 12/2/1957 | See Source »

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