Word: markey
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...following men are the House representatives of the business board: Earl L. Smith '46, (Adams), William R. Chandler '46 (Dunster), Charles B. Bronston '46 (Eliot), John W. Callaban '46 (Kirkland), Thomas H. Land '46 (Leverett), William L. Markey '46 (Lowell, and Archibaid T. Morrison, Jr. '46 (Winthrop...
...Conor, who gave Senator George L. Radcliffe a sound beating in the Democratic primary, has a smooth-working machine, well-greased by patronage for this election. Governor O'Conor strums an anti-Russia serenade for Baltimore's big Catholic vote. His Republican opponent, Colonel David John Markey, a poor campaigner himself, will get much-needed help from Baltimore's popular Mayor Theodore R. McKeldin, now running for Governor. Best bet as of last week: O'Conor...
Married. Myrna Loy, 40, redheaded, pretty but jug-eared "perfect screen wife"; and Commodore (on terminal leave) Gene Markey, 50, cinema scenarist and producer, wartime member of Admiral William F. Halsey's staff; both for the third time; on Terminal Island, Calif. At ceremony's end, Gene pecked Myrna's cheek, she pecked Best Man Halsey's. Said the Markeys: "This time it will stick." Her former husbands: Producer Arthur Hornblow Jr., Advertising Executive John D. Hertz Jr. His former wives: Cinemactresses Joan Bennett, Hedy Lamarr...
Joan Bennett decided that the time had come to change ly-year-old Daughter Diana's last name again. It was'Fox when Cinemactress Bennett was Mrs. John Fox, then Markey when she was Mrs. Gene Markey; now that she is Mrs. Walter Wanger, she wants a Los Angeles court to make Diana a Wanger...
...Markey James developed an early interest in history and read Froissart's Chronicles in Enid's one-room public library. He also studied up on the lives of U.S. Presidents. "My favorites were George Washington (though he seemed too good to be true), Andrew Jackson (for his refusal to clean the British officer's boots), Abraham Lincoln (he was such a good wrestler), and Andrew Johnson (the runaway apprentice)." But the profession that enthralled him longest-more even than stagecoach driver or railroadman or lawyer-was that of printer...