Word: reeds
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...John S. Reed, 35, an industrial management graduate of M.I.T., four years ago became the youngest executive vice president in the history of First National City Bank. Put in charge of the tangle-prone back office at New York's largest bank, he approached the operation-which employed 8,000 people and had a $100 million budget-as if it were a factory whose product was processed paper. To help him run the factory, Reed recruited experienced industrial employees from Ford and Chrysler. Regarded as a potential successor to Citibank's presidency, Reed has written articles seeking...
...Bruce Reed has a thin, wasted face and the appearance of a man twice his age. A welfare recipient, he spends his days wandering down Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, Calif., with a bottle of cheap wine or a marijuana cigarette in his hand. Tom Finley, 21, also a Telegraph Avenue regular, earns a scant $40 a month, mostly by selling his blood. Annie Peters, 17, lives off the refuse in Berkeley garbage cans and occasionally peddles dope. Though their names have been changed, their stories are very real and typify the plight of what two social scientists at the University...
...exuberant, cheering Egyptians lined the seven-mile route as the two Presidents rode in an open limousine to Cairo. They perched atop walls, perilously packed balconies, clung to lampposts, balanced from bus windows and roof ledges. Bands of white-turbaned men wearing flowing blue galabias played primitive reed flutes in Nixon's honor. American flags fluttered, and the sky rained red, white and blue confetti. Amid the ubiquitous (if unflattering to Nixon) portraits of the two Presidents, signs in Arabic and English blossomed and bobbed: WE TRUST NIXON. GOD BLESS NIXON. KEEP IT UP, NIXON. Clapping and dancing...
...Lena is enjoying what may turn out to be a short career. The Solomons have refused her singing lessons because they fear training would remove her voice's earthy appeal. Thus Lena is in danger of losing her voice entirely, a fate that befell another Solomon prodigy, Neil Reed, a twelve-year-old who apparently started croaking after a mere eight months. However, said Phil, "girls' voices are supposed to hold up longer than boys...
...weary State Department correspondent, John Mulliken, who traveled 24,230 miles with the Secretary over 34 days, wrote - on the plane back to Washington - a detailed report on Kissinger's feat and the outlook for the Geneva negotiations. In New York, Reporter-Researchers Sara Medina and Susan Reed gathered background material and geared up for a fast job of fact checking. Associate Editor Spencer Davidson, one of TIME'S most experienced Middle East hands with nine previous Middle East covers to his credit, wrote the story. A graduate of Baltimore's Loyola College, Davidson reported on metropolitan...