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| Steve Reid | |
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Position: Guard |
| Member Biography | |
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Steve Reid played football at Leo High School in his
hometown of Chicago before enrolling at Northwestern where
he became a three-year letterman for the Wildcats. He was
captain and Most Valuable Player for the 1936 Big Ten
Champions and was also Northwestern's most widely-picked
All-American since Pug Rentner. Reid stood proud in defeat
as well as in victory throughout one of the most exciting
schedules of the 1936 season. A 5-9, 192-pound guard
whose forte was blocking, he was often called upon by Coach
Pappy Waldorf to pull out of the line to lead the interference.
Reid played in the East-West Shrine Game and, in 1961, was
named to SPORTS ILLUSTRATED'S "Silver Anniversary"
All-America football team. During World War II he served as
a Major in the U.S. Army Medical Corps and was awarded
the Presidential Citation with three battle stars. Reid became
Vice-Chairman of the Department of Surgery at Evanston
Hospital, and Professor of Surgery at Northwestern
University. He has been a Wildcat team physician since 1950,
and earned national recognition by conducting a football helmet
study which measures intensities of impacts in order to reduce
head and neck injuries.
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