Word: wickman
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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Thomas M. Wickman ’07, a member of the Boston Chapter of MESJ, is a student at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Eunice Y. McMurray ’04, a Harvard Medical Student, and Peter L. McMurray ’05 are co-chairs of the Boston Chapter of MESJ...
...Wickman ’07 is a history and literature concentrator affiliated with Currier House. He received a Hoopes Prize for his thesis...
...essentially normal. If their faces were not constantly displayed on ESPN they would be hard to distinguish from anyone else; this is especially true for many of the pitchers, who tend to be on the flabby side. One player in particular, thirteen-year veteran and Indians closer Bob Wickman (6’1 240 lbs.), could easily pass for a regular local patron at the Hong Kong, perched on a bar stool next to Touchdown...
...relief pitcher probably was tougher in his day. In 1975, a year in which he led the American League with 26 saves, Gossage pitched 142 innings. Thirty years later, Bob Wickman shared the lead with 45 saves, pitching just 62 innings. That's half the work, double the reward. But it's a stretch to say that today's chiseled, athletic players are inferior to yesterday's stars. "Laughable," says Miami Herald sports columnist Dan Le Batard, 37. "What, anywhere in society, was better 25 years ago? You're using better training methods and previous education. And there...
Sources: Dr. Ridwan Shabsigh, Columbia University; Dr. Debra Wickman, Female Sexual Medicine Center, UCLA