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...Crimson freshmen, defeated only by Pennsylvania, also wrestle Yale tomorrow. Starters for Johnny Lee's team will be: Bob DeVore (123), George Doub (130), Bill Smith (137), Tom Owsley (147), Steve Schultz (157), Lee Freeman (167), Charlie Long (177), and heavyweight Harlan Noel...

Author: By Peter J. Rothenberg, | Title: Underdog Wrestlers Meet Yale In Closing Match at New Haven | 3/7/1959 | See Source »

...ready for the road (New England), the Bairds worked 14 hours a day last week, and as for the past 21 years they worked at home: a bright onetime stable in an upper West Side district. Before the Bairds, a previous tenant was Prohibition Bootlegger "Dutch" Schultz, who left it to Baird to dig highjackers' bullets out of the walls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Bairds on the Wing | 12/29/1958 | See Source »

...lire, francs, guilders, dinars, schillings. Some 5,000,000 of them are pouring south and west in an eager tourist flight from the greyer skies and industrial soot of their prosperous native land. "It is the fresh air and sunshine that we like best," gushed buxom, blonde Use Schultz on the beach at Ostia. "It is so wonderful to feel the sun scorching until it hurts." In Italy the Germans outnumber American tourists, though they do not outspend them. They are Europe's No. 1 travelers outside their own borders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WEST GERMANY: The Friendly Invasion | 9/8/1958 | See Source »

Finally, according to Peter D. Schultz '52, Secretary of the Alumni Association, "The dollar sign does loom pretty big." The Alumni Association, through the Harvard Fund Council, headed by poet David T.W. McCord '21, tries to encourage the "habit of annual giving...

Author: By Mark J. Eisner, | Title: Alumni Play Increasingly Vital Role | 6/9/1958 | See Source »

Boilers Out. From Jan. 3, when he arrived in Caracas on a 36-hr, visa (later extended), Rio-based Tad Szulc (pronounced Schultz) filed the most detailed daily newspaper coverage of the off-again-on-again revolution to come out of Venezuela. With help from Caracas news sources cultivated in two years of covering South America for the Times, ex-U.P.man Szulc, 31, not only stayed on top of the story, but used every trick in the newsman's kick to ram his dispatches past the unsuspecting censors. By telephone from Caracas this week, Correspondent Szulc told...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Uncensorable Newsman | 2/3/1958 | See Source »

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