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...school officials seem convinced that their students are serious scholars. "I've yet to meet a student who goes into graduate school to get out of the armed forces-and if I did, I wouldn't let him in," says University of Texas Graduate Dean W. Gordon Whaley. Yet one of Whaley's students says: "I'm sick of school. I don't want to work on my Ph.D.-but I don't want the Army a lot more." Echoes a Yale graduate-school candidate: "I just want to get off the damn scholastic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Universities: The Graduate-School Squeeze | 4/15/1966 | See Source »

...conceded that "Darryl Click" did not drive a taxicab in which Oswald was a passenger. When "Darryl Click" disappeared from the case, "William Whaley" appeared as the man who drove Oswald, not home, but at least in that general direction...

Author: By Mark Lane, | Title: 'Is Oswald Guilty? | 1/16/1964 | See Source »

Oswald, it is alleged, eventually le bus after riding about six blocks and was walking "from Commerce Street" when the taxicab driver, now named "William Whaley" saw him. Oswald, it is alleged, hailed the taxi, and entered it. "William Whaley's" log shows that Oswald entered the taxi, after having completed this entire trip, at exactly 12:30 p.m. The shots that killed Kennedy were fired...

Author: By Mark Lane, | Title: 'Is Oswald Guilty? | 1/16/1964 | See Source »

Died. Percival Huntington Whaley, 82. founder and editor (from 1918 to 1957) of the "Whaley-Eaton American Letter." first of the commercial newsletters that now flow out of Washington; of pulmonary emphysema; in Washington...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Apr. 12, 1963 | 4/12/1963 | See Source »

...veterans, the rookie cop would be carefully introduced to petty grafting: cadging free meals in the local restaurants, accepting daily handouts of a couple of packs of cigarettes-for resale-from bartenders on his beat. Then there were the more advanced lessons in stealing from drunks. Says Patrolman Bobbie Whaley, 32, who became one of the most skillful of Denver's police safecrackers: "A drunk, if he had dough on him, never had it when he got out of jail. If the bartender didn't roll him, the cops did. If the arresting officer didn't roll...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: THE LESSONS OF DENVER | 11/3/1961 | See Source »

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