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...committee is headed by Alexis V. Tellis, chairman of the Yearbook, and William J. Hickey, business manager. Other members of the Harvard group are Frank Farwell, Stanley Fayman, Robert Henninger, John Hollis, George Menkes, Eliot Mover, Travis Nelson, Robert Sehaeberle, and Charles Williams...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUPPLY CORPS DANCE JUNE 17 | 6/9/1944 | See Source »

Other weekend workers were equally undaunted. Said Storekeeper Floyd Bagley: "It's good exercise." Accountant Grover Lowe: "I've got a boy in England and another up north. . . . This gives me a chance to do something." Verne Hickey, Chamber of Commerce president: "Merely a matter of changing a golf stick for a shovel . . . Didn't even have to change my stance much...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Weekend with Pay | 2/15/1943 | See Source »

Another story was told by the famed team of little Creighton University, a Jesuit school in the heart of Omaha, which always produces formidable basketball teams. Creighton's 42-year-old Coach Eddie Hickey has chalked up a percentage of .669 during his ten-year term, but last week, in the Chicago Stadium, Hickey's sharpshooters got their first defeat of the season from the Great Lakes Naval Training Station Bluejackets (their supersquad includes twelve onetime college stars...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Basketball's Big Year | 2/1/1943 | See Source »

...Chaplain School Faculty. An address will be delivered by Brig. Gen. Thomas E. Trolane, commandant of the M. P. battalion of the First Service Command. Chaplain (Col.) Cleary will then present the diplomas and the program will be concluded with a benediction by the Right Reverend Monsignor Albert F. Hickey, of St. Paul's Church in Cambridge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHAPLAIN SCHOOL WILL GRADUATE 150 OFFICERS | 9/4/1942 | See Source »

Before Tobruk fell, no one gave even an outside chance to the Independent candidate in the by-election at Maldon, near London. Middle-class Maldon was considered a sure Conservative district. Independent Candidate Tom Driberg, 37, although England's most widely read columnist ("William Hickey" of the London Daily Express), was a breezy leftist, so unconventional that in 1939 he called Adolf Hitler at his Berlin telephone number (only to be told that he could not speak to the Führer). But when the Government candidate, Conservative Reuben Hunt, attributed Britain's Libyan reverses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Elected by Rommel | 7/6/1942 | See Source »

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