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Examples

  • Wootton Bassett's current mayor, Paul Heaphy, admits there was a fear that the "repat days" had become too big.

    Wootton Bassett marks end of repatriation days 2011

  • Choir member Angela Heaphy, a parishioner at St. Patrick Church, said she joined the group not only because of the singing, but also because it provides an opportunity to learn more about the rich traditions of the Catholic Church.

    Chant in Anchorage 2009

  • The Senate will now consider the nominations of Bogden as well as the others announced Friday – Timothy Heaphy for Virginia; Peter Neronha, for Rhode Island and Deborah Gilg for Nebraska.

    Fired U.S. Attorney gets second chance 2009

  • For Heaphy, chanting has benefits that extend far beyond the choir loft.

    Chant in Anchorage 2009

  • Kent State University historian Leslie Heaphy argues that the majority of games played by black teams during the course of a typical season were exhibitions of one kind or another—not “official” league contests.6 Barnstorming became such a profitable enterprise for white professionals that some autumns during the Roaring Twenties, a dozen or more squads were out on the circuit, many of them competing against black teams.7

    Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert Timothy M. Gay 2010

  • Professor Leslie Heaphy of Kent State University, a great blackball historian and coordinator of the yearly Malloy Conference, could not have been more responsive.

    Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert Timothy M. Gay 2010

  • Professor Leslie Heaphy of Kent State University, a great blackball historian and coordinator of the yearly Malloy Conference, could not have been more responsive.

    Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert Timothy M. Gay 2010

  • Kent State University historian Leslie Heaphy argues that the majority of games played by black teams during the course of a typical season were exhibitions of one kind or another—not “official” league contests.6 Barnstorming became such a profitable enterprise for white professionals that some autumns during the Roaring Twenties, a dozen or more squads were out on the circuit, many of them competing against black teams.7

    Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert Timothy M. Gay 2010

  • Kent State University historian Leslie Heaphy argues that the majority of games played by black teams during the course of a typical season were exhibitions of one kind or another—not “official” league contests.6 Barnstorming became such a profitable enterprise for white professionals that some autumns during the Roaring Twenties, a dozen or more squads were out on the circuit, many of them competing against black teams.7

    Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert Timothy M. Gay 2010

  • Professor Leslie Heaphy of Kent State University, a great blackball historian and coordinator of the yearly Malloy Conference, could not have been more responsive.

    Satch, Dizzy & Rapid Robert Timothy M. Gay 2010

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