Word: reeds
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Crimson is pleased to announce the awarding of the 1972 Dana Reed Prize, given to the best writing in an undergraduate publication, to former Crimson managing editor Arthur H. Lubow '73, for an article on tenure at Harvard which appeared in the June 1972 Commencement issue. A Crimson editor has won the Prize each of the last five years...
...local League of Women Voters: "Watergate is all you hear talked about. The number of disillusioned Republicans is incredible." Yet in an auto-service shop in the poorer section across town, the workers are fed up with Watergate. "What the hell's the big deal?" booms Mechanic Carl Reed, 51. "Both parties have been doing it for years." Ken Masshart, 34, blasts: "I'm so sick of hearing about it that I couldn't care less. I just jump right over it in the paper and read something else." On the first day of the Senate hearings...
...employees in a suit against their own union. Foundation officials contend that their efforts are legal because donor corporations contribute to a common fund and have no choice in deciding which suits get legal aid; thus, they say, no company is instigating suits by its own employees. Foundation President Reed Larson nevertheless refuses to disclose the names of the corporate contributors, although in effect the ten-union suit demands that he do so. If he did, says Larson, the unions would "try to intimidate these people to stop giving...
...next four games, in fact, the Knicks' top scorers were Forward Bill Bradley, 26 points; Center Reed, 22; Forward Dave DeBusschere, 33; and Guard Earl Monroe, 23. Together they added up to four straight wins and the second N.B.A. title for the Knicks...
...Said Reed, who was presented with a Most Valuable Player award that could have been divided eight ways: "In the end it was our poise that held us together." Poise with a punch. The Knicks' triumph, in fact, has given the game a renewed emphasis that is echoed in the clarion call of the rabid Knick fans: "Dee-fense!" A relatively small team, the New Yorkers intimidate not by brute force but with a clawing finesse that presses the limits of the rules. Reed handled Laker Center Wilt Chamberlain, for example, with muscular simplicity: he leaned against the giant...