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Harvard will have a much tougher time with the National team. Although last year's Harvard All-American. Joe Cavanagh, is out with a broken wrist, the Nationals have sufficient scoring punch in former Boston College stars Tim Sheehy. Kevin Ahearn and Norwood's schoolboy wonder, Robbie Ftorek. The Nationals, who have been playing together since last September, tied B.U., 4-4, and can play on a par with the best College teams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stickmen Meet Princeton, Nationals | 12/17/1971 | See Source »

...rollover accident-even though there is no statistical evidence that convertibles are less safe. In an era of growing crime, the convertible is an easy target; knife-wielding thieves can readily slash through the top to loot or steal a parked car. Besides all that, observes Chuck Norwood, a member of Lincoln-Mercury's product-planning staff, "the convertible was part of a life-style that has changed. Men used to take their girls out on moonlit nights to country lanes" where they could lower the top and admire the stars. Today, notes Norwood, the man is more likely...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AUTOS: Last Ride for a Status Symbol | 4/12/1971 | See Source »

...lost for fresh-air fiends, however: automakers are increasingly replacing the convertible with the European-style sliding sun roof. "It allows light and ventilation," says Norwood, "but shuts out dirt, noise and potential thieves." Until recently, demand had been too small for automakers to set up an assembly-line procedure for making sun roofs; they still send many cars to the seven-year-old American Sunroof Co. of Southgate, Mich., where craftsmen cut a hole in the roof and install a sliding steel panel. But the market is expanding so swiftly that in January American Motors began making sun roofs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AUTOS: Last Ride for a Status Symbol | 4/12/1971 | See Source »

...though the U.A.W. and the automen had taken George Meany's proposition to heart. Leonard Woodcock's low-key style is in sharp contrast to Reuther's combativeness. The companies, too, have been less belligerent than Roche's tough words would indicate. At the Norwood, Ohio, Chevrolet assembly plant, workers staged a nine-day go-slow without audible protest from General Motors. Last week a jurisdictional strike halted work at the Lordstown plant, the home of G.M.'s subcompact, the Vega 2300. Normally, says Woodcock, the company would be "kicking and screaming and disciplining right...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Big Stakes in the Auto Talks | 9/7/1970 | See Source »

...Cohen, of Evanston, III., and Dunster House (History); Harlan P. Cohen, of Dallas Texas and Eliot House (Government): Stephen A. Cole, of Rockville Centre. N. Y., and Eliot Hiuse (Social Studies); John W. Curtis, of Hampton, Va., and Lowell House (History and Literature?); Jerem?ah F. Donovan, of Norwood and Kirkland House (English): Andrew S. Effron, of Poughkeepsie. N. Y. and Leverett House (Government); Paul E. Ehrlich, of Schenectady. N. Y., and Winthrop House (Mathematies); Loftin E. Elvey. Jr., of Norwood and Adams House (English); Arnold D. Feldman, of University City, Mo., and Leverett House (Mathematies): Alexander J. Field...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Phi Beta Kappa Elections | 6/11/1970 | See Source »

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