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2 unusual facts about Bruce K. Holloway


Bruce Holloway

Bruce K. Holloway (1912–1999), U.S. Air Force general and Strategic Air Command commander

Bruce K. Holloway

He became commander-in-chief of the Strategic Air Command at Offutt AFB, Nebraska, on August 1, 1968, and remained in that position until his retirement from the Air Force in 1972.


African-American literature

In an alternative reading, Karla F.C. Holloway's "Legal Fictions" (forthcoming from Duke University Press, 2014) suggests a different composition for the tradition and argues its contemporary vitality.

Bruce Alexander

Bruce K. Alexander (born 1939), Canadian psychologist known for research into addiction

Bruce K. Alexander

Alexander and SFU colleagues conducted a series of experiments into drug addiction known as the Rat Park experiments.

Bruce K. Ferguson

He has served as visiting professor at the University of Texas at Austin and Tsinghua University in Beijing, and has lectured at Cornell, Berkeley, Harvard, and 20 other universities.

Bryan R. Holloway

He is a member of First Baptist Church in King, North Carolina and resides in King with his wife, Misti, and their dog, Governor.

Clyde C. Holloway

Holloway shocked political observers on August 21, 2013, when he filed to run in Louisiana's 5th congressional district special election held on October 19, to choose a successor to Republican Rodney Alexander, who resigned from Congress on September 26.

On August 21, 2013, Holloway filed to run in the special election for Louisiana's 5th congressional district following the resignation of Congressman Rodney Alexander.

Dee D. Drell

Though Drell is considered a conservative Republican – he donated $300 to defeated GOP congressional candidate Clyde C. Holloway even after Bush tendered the nomination – he drew the praise of one of the Senate's most liberal members, Democrat Patrick Leahy of Vermont.

James Holloway

James L. Holloway, Jr. (1898–1984), U.S. Navy admiral, superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy

Karla F.C. Holloway

Holloway played a central role in the Duke lacrosse-team rape case of 2006-7, in which three white members of the men's lacrosse team at Duke were charged with raping a black woman at a party.


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