Word: hoey
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...months, U.S. Attorney Joseph Hoey and a team of assistants had worked to prepare the Government's case against accused Soviet Spy Aleksandr Sokolov and his mysterious female accomplice (TIME, July 12, 1963). In Brooklyn Federal Court last week everything was ready. The jurors had taken their seats and been sworn in. Within minutes Hoey would begin his opening remarks...
...Hoey was summoned to the telephone; at the other end of the line was Acting Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach in Washington. As Hoey listened, his face clouded. When he hung up, there was a hurried conference in the chambers of Judge John F. Dooling Jr. Then Hoey, still visibly shaken, appeared before the court, announced that Katzenbach had ordered him to drop the prosecution "in the interests of national security." Said Hoey: "The Government moves to dismiss the indictment against both the defendants...
...running events, Yale's Bobby Mack should place first in the two events that he enters. Mack can win in the mile, the 1000 yd. run, and the two mile, but he can only compete in two of the three. Princeton's Pete Hoey could give Ed Hamlin and Eddie Meehan as much trouble as Mack...
Princeton, featuring 6 ft., 6 in. high jumper John Hartnett, 14 ft. pole vaulter Charlie Mitchell, 6.3 sprinter Hugh Macmillan, 1:12 600 man Lew Hitzrot, 2:13 1000 runners Pete Hoey and Whit Azoy, 4:18 miler Ted Johnson, and 9:18 two-miler Rod Zwirner, should be good for 36 points or thereabouts...
Other hard-fought events should be the broad jump, in which any of six competitors could win, and the two-mile relay, which should produce a tight Harvard-Princeton battle. Princeton's twosome of Hoey and Azoy threatens in the 1000, but Mullin or Ed Hamlin, who seems to be on his way after a 1:57 880 leg against Holy Cross, should take first for the Crimson...