Word: mahoney
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Diver Danny Mahoney, and butterfly artists Harry Turner and Joe Stetx should also contribute significantly to Harvard's point totals in the coming weeks...
Unless an impending recount invalidates his election, one of the two new Councillors will be Thomas H.D. Mahoney, an M.I.T. professor who, as a School Committeeman for three terms, established the Committee's "university chair." Mahoney may be able to start a similar precedent on the Council, but even if he does not, he should serve as a highly valuable liaison between Cambridge and the universities. Harvard and M.I.T. have much to offer Cambridge in the way of talent and theoretical knowledge, and the City can do much to aid the universities in matters concerning revenues and land...
...only nonincumbent candidates among the ten front-runners in the election are Thomas Coates, an insurance specialist who finished twelfth in the last Council election: Thomas H.D. Mahoney, an M.I.T. professor who is just completing a term on the School Committee; and William G. Maher, a detective in the Cambridge police force. The seven Councillors seeking re-election were among the top nine candidates at the end of today's tabulation...
Harvard divided the other field events with the Crusaders. Jay Mahoney won a poor pole vault contest followed by the Crimson's George Winter. Hobie Armstrong and Chukwama Asikiwe took the hop-step-and-jump. But Holy Cross took both places in the high jump and their only triple winner, Dick Malberger, won the broad jump. In the absence of Aggrey Awori, Malberger also won both sprints, though sophomore John Parker took seconds...
Died. Daniel Joseph Mahoney. 73. craggy, quick-tongued publisher of the Miami News, who started his newspaper career in Ohio, then went to Florida, where in 1923 he had bought the News for his father-in-law, Newspaper Owner James M. Cox, and proceeded to make life uncomfortable for Miami's race-track racketeers and expose the city's corrupt "termite administration'' in 1938 (for which the News won a Pulitzer Prize); of injuries suffered in the explosion of an anesthetic (cyclopropane) during an operation for lung cancer; in Manhattan...