Word: quigley
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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This is absolutely untrue. In answer to a direct question from Mr. Goldhaber, he was informed that Harvard Coaches DO NOT teach "spearing" in any form, but try to eradicate the practice when it has been learned in high school. Thomas B. Quigley, M.D. Clinical Professor of Surgery Surgeon, University Health Services...
When I interviewed Dr. Quigley, he told me that the team physicians don't do the coaching and that the coaches don't practice medicine. Therefore, when I revealed that Harvard coaches this season have in fact taught a modified type of spearing, I relied not on any physician's statement but on the following detalled account of All-Ivy guard Jerry Hevern...
...when the center signed a purchase agreement for 11.9 acres of a former bean field two days before Christmas 1969. The land was to be the site of a low-income housing project, the sixth that the group had initiated, the first in the suburbs. Says Center Director Jack Quigley: "If we were not to be guilty of gilding the ghetto, we would have to get into the suburbs." Black Jack was chosen because it was one of the few areas in northern St. Louis County that was zoned for multiple-family dwellings. Named Park View Heights, the $3.5 million...
Question Mark. The letters and petitions produced a White House cancellation of the project in May, but it was revived five days later when Quigley and Mittelstadt appealed to HUD. With Park View Heights a near reality, Black Jack decided to incorporate. The Interreligious Center tried to block incorporation, but its suit was dismissed. On Sept. 10, 1970. Black Jack became a city. Insisting that the objections were economic, not racial, the new little town held hearings; within six weeks it adopted a zoning regulation that would prevent the construction of homes for more than one family. Two black members...
Harvard will be hindered in its efforts by injuries. "One of these is the condition of [Tom] Spengler's cranky knee," McCurdy said. "He is under treatment by Dr. Bart Quigley but the trouble is it's been so long since he's been able to train hard that he's beginning to demonstrate the stride Quigley uses rushing onto the football field in errands of medical mercy...