Word: seventeen
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...Seventeen sophomores were enrolled in the unit when the Air Force announced that the program would be discontinued. These students would have been required to pass a physical exam in order to enter the advanced phase of the program...
...spite of these misfortunes and a decided lack of height Coach Floyd Wilson has more than a few reason for looking forward to at least some improvement over last year's six and seventeen record. Team spirit is unusually high and five juniors who showed flashes of brilliance last year in the team's victories over Ivy League champion Princeton, Yale, and Brown, are back to form the nucleus of this season's squad. In this group are Canty, Haughey, Bob Hastings, Bob Barnett, and Dick Hurley...
...Little A.P. For TV Guide, the problem is not circulation, but how to print a national magazine with local news in 36 different areas. But President Walter Annenberg, 47, whose Triangle Publications, Inc. also publishes the Philadelphia Inquirer, Daily Racing Form, the New York Morning Telegraph, Seventeen, Official Detective Stories (TIME, July 20, 1953), is no stranger to regional publishing. At one time he turned out eight regional editions of the Daily Racing Form; until the Wartime paper shortage killed it, he printed four regional editions of Radio Guide. In 1953 he decided he could turn out a national-local...
Rumblings in Islam. Peace was not to return that easily. At week's end the revanche went on. Across half the world, Islam reverberated with sympathy and alarm. Seventeen Arab and Asian nations asked the U.N. to intervene. In Karachi, 5,000 Moslems burst through police lines and burned an effigy of "French Colonialism." The U.S., with some 20,000 Americans stationed at the four SAC air bases in Morocco, maneuvered to keep from being involved. Anxious to support the cause of Arab freedom, yet loth to antagonize NATO Partner France, Washington only expressed concern and asked the French...
...Seventeen months after the career of Army Dentist Irving Peress became a public issue, the U.S. Senate's Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations last week issued its report on the case. The subcommittee found what had been obvious from the first (TIME, March 8, 1954): the promotion and honorable discharge of Major Peress, after he refused to answer questions about Communist affiliations, was entwined in red tape, not in Red subversion...