Word: hogans
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...TIME, Nov. 17, 1941), famed for its steady stream of good music. Aside from the obvious reason that a newspaper buys a radio station to disseminate news and keep its name before the public, one reason why the Times bought it probably had to do with a man named Hogan...
Paunchy, bespectacled John Vincent Lawless Hogan was a radio engineer long before the U.S. public thought of radio. For over ten years he has been deep in the development of radio facsimile, by which reproduced news pages roll out of a receiver in a reader's living room...
...dinner were Mayor Corcoran, William M. Hogan Jr., vice chairman of the city council; City Manager John B. Atkinson, and Councilmen Francis L. Sennott, Hyman Pill, Michael A. Sullivan, Marcus Morton Jr., Thomas M. McNamara, Sgt. Edward A. Crane and ex-Mayor John D. Lynch. President Conant, Treasurer William M. Claflin Jr., and the following members of the Harvard Corporation were present: Henry L. Shattuck, Dr. Roger I. Lee, Grenville Clark, and Charles A. Coolidge...
...Hogan, who used to catch for the Cleveland Indians, had only a fair day against the College boys. He drew a pass, popped to Fltzgibbons, and blasted a hit off Gallagher's glove before a Berg curve caught him in the wrist and forced him to leave the game...
Harvard respected Hogan's arm, though, and no Varsity player attempted to pilfer second, and Paul Quinn was picked off second by the ex-Indian in the fourth. But Jim Gallagher made him and starting pitcher Al Cleary (from the Northern League) look mighty foolish in the third frame when the Crimson third-sacker stole home...