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Your article in the May 5 Crimson about L.D. Reddick deserves "congratulations." In past years The Crimson simply ignored the Afro-American Studies Department's many outstanding accomplishments or enveloped them in controversy as is still fashionable...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tenure Ephraim Isaacs | 5/19/1976 | See Source »

...pleased to know that Professor Lawrence D. Reddick is going to continue as Visiting Professor in the Afro-American Studies Department during the coming year (May 5, 1976). It is high time that Harvard bring to this campus a professor of the history of black Americans (even...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tenure Isaac | 5/12/1976 | See Source »

Robert Bell Reddick's Ten Walking Tours of Cambridge dismisses the building at 14 Plympton Street in about half a sentence, giving short shrift to its "neo-Georgian" design, and saying that Lampy's castle "puts to shame the Crimson Building." Harvard's semi-official book on it own architecture, Education, Bricks, and Mortar, doesn't mention the building at all, Newspaper buildings by and large are rough, functional structures, which serve a practical daily purpose and expedite the production of their publications. Few of them win architecture awards, and none of them can approach in grandeur the Lampoon...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Gathers Funds for a New Home | 1/24/1973 | See Source »

...haven't rebuilt buildings; there are no more jobs now, no more anything." This summer, many blacks have shifted from marches and demonstrations to more pragmatic political activity that often paid off in local elections; blacks have begun to take over many city offices. Says the Rev. Ed Reddick, director of research for Operation Breadbasket in Chicago: "There may have been an awareness that violence is self-defeating, that you have to work for political and economic power...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CITIES: Why Summer Was Mostly Cool | 9/20/1971 | See Source »

Bothered Brethren. To many Washingtonians, Moyers is one of the squarest guys in town. Because of his Baptist credentials, his cottage-cheese complexion and Sunday-school propriety, he is likely to have trouble shedding the Eagle Scout image. Yet, insists Dr. DeWitt Reddick. director of the University of Texas Journalism School, where Moyers was a straight-A student: "There's nothing sanctimonious about him." And, press critics to the contrary, he was never a Boy Scout...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Administration: L.B.J.'s Young Man In Charge of Everything | 10/29/1965 | See Source »

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