Word: reed
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...conductor." Nevertheless, when King was deposed in a surprise boardroom revolt in 1968, I.P.C. directors picked Cudlipp as his successor. Ailing I.P.C. continued to flounder, so Cudlipp decided that he ought to turn in his baton and, as he put it, "get out my Stradivarius." Last week the Reed Group, a major British paper manufacturer, received government approval to take over I.P.C. for $304 million in stock and debentures...
...month authorized a patently political investigation of M.S.I., and hope to pin the disaster on the Democrats. This will not be too easy. Until the sugar-beet business turned sour, Republicans were just as eager as Democrats to promote the operation, and it was the then Republican Governor, John Reed, who appealed to the legislature to reclassify the Prestile Stream. Even the state's potato farmers, whose votes the Republicans hope to win, must accept some blame for the failure of Vahlsing's venture. Exercising typical New England caution, they planted only a fraction of the allotted acreage...
Georgia Tech and Virginia Tech should offer the Crimson the stiffest competition. Although they have not been overly powerful as a team, Virginia Tech has had several fine individuals in past years. Bob Reed (142) appears to be the Gobbiers best performer this year...
...TRAVELER -This paper, which supports Nixon in front-page editorials and is read widely by the over-50 types who?? season tickets to the Friday Symphony, is trying to get back the Harvard audience that it lost about 10 years ago when the Globe began to get good. Jack Reed and I, both former CRIMSON editors, hang around quite a bit and write almost exclusively for the Sunday paper. Skip McCaffery is the Cambridge writer, very good, much like Croft, and a-man of many disguises who once got into an SDS meeting dressed up as a janitor...
...Tangerine Bowl last year, and nothing he has done this year (57 receptions, 11 TDs) has diminished their interest. A hurdler on the track team, Gillette has speed, superb balance, and more moves than Joe Namath at a cocktail party. "He's tall, thin as a reed," says one dossier, "yet he can take a beating. He's got a long, effortless stride-satin-smooth." All that, plus an exceptionally good pair of hands, make the scouts report that "he's got the kind of assets that set coaches drooling...