News

Even cameos from much-loved characters and a shock reveal could not save a meandering instalment which could sound the show’s ...
Russia and Ukraine each released 390 prisoners on Friday and said they would free more in the coming days, in what is expected to be the biggest prisoner swap of the war so far. Sean Hogan has more.
How to address that issue is complicated, and Gov. Moore’s conclusion that now wasn’t the right moment to explore the ...
April 23, 1998: Troopers John Hogan and James Kenna pull over a minivan ... Feb. 28, 1999: In an interview, Col. Carl Williams, state police superintendent, says that Blacks and Latinos are ...
The way Col. Hogan and his Heroes turned the tables in the ‘60s sitcom was by turning the officiousness of the Germans against them – first and foremost, playing the puffery of Klink’s “no ...
So the American ingenuity pulls through there all the time.” Hogan says there will be something for everyone to learn from Col. Ellis’s address on Saturday. “Being a prisoner of war is ...
With camp security raised, Hogan and his men are desperate to smuggle some top-secret plans of German fortifications to the Allies. The solution? Make liberal use of Carter's remarkable impersonation ...
The event marked the formal transition of outgoing commander Col. Kyle M. Hogan, to incoming commander Col. Kevin J. Consedine. Consedine is CCAD’s 29th commanding officer. Maj. Gen. Thomas W.
A sitcom set in a Nazi prisoner-of-war camp, “Hogan’s Heroes” ran for six seasons on CBS, from 1965 to 1971, with Crane’s portrayal of the wise-cracking American Colonel Robert E. Hogan making the ...
Lt. Col. William Hogan, 48, is a foreign area officer based in France, where he works as a liaison between the Pentagon and the French military. He discussed his new book, “Task Force Hogan ...