Word: whitelaw
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Divorced. Whitelaw Reid, 46, onetime (1947-55) editor of the New York Herald Tribune; by Joan Brandon, 29, whose mother, Dorothy Brandon, was a Washington-bureau staff member of the Herald Tribune; after eleven years of marriage, two children; in Reno...
...Engineers, coached by Bob Whitelaw, will take the field against the Crimson at 3 p.m., weather permitting. Rain is forecast for the afternoon, and there is considerable doubt about the chances of playing...
...precipitation holds off, Whitelaw will start pitcher Dick Oehler, a junk-ball left hander. Oehler has been very successful in games earlier this spring and may well give the Crimson batters a trying afternoon. Last year he was responsible for shutting out Harvard with two hits...
Though M.I.T.'s pre-season record of one win and two losses was unimpressive, its pitching was good, and Whitelaw is quite optimistic about the prospects. The Engineers lost to Johns Hopkins and Catholic University but edged Rutgers...
After Owner-Editor Ogden Reid died in 1947, popping off went out of style at the Trib. Classmates of Whitelaw Reid (Yale '36), Ogden's son, began showing up on the payroll-even on Woodward's staff. In 1948, during an economy wave, the management suggested that Woodward trim off a few sports hands, asked him for names. Barked the Coach: "Red Smith and me." Not long after that, Whitelaw Reid found a name for the trim list: Rufus Stanley Woodward. The new sports editor was Robert Cooke (Yale...