Word: chattanooga
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Albany, N. Y., for an essay "The Development of Eros in the Pre-Socratics and in Plato"; $100 to Robert B. Broadwater '42, of Oakland, Md., for an essay "The Importance of Imagery in Henry James' Later Novels"; and $150 to Gordon M. Messing, fourth-year graduate student, of Chattanooga, Tenn., for a portion of his dissertation submitted for the degree of Ph.D. in Classical Philology...
McKellar pounded his amendment through. But this week he faced another stiff fight in the House-and in waging his feud he had let his popularity in TVA-loving Tennessee scrape bottom. Said the Chattanooga Times: "If the whole thing could be forgotten and everyone could go on with the war, such adjustments as may be needed in the TVA system . . . can be made at a time when the Japanese and Germans are not at our throats...
...turning down bishoprics, he was very busy filling top-flight pulpits. His first charge was as curate of old St. Michael's, the fashionable church in Charleston, in his native South Carolina. From there he went to Christ Church, Macon, Ga., then to St. Paul's, Chattanooga-one of the biggest churches in Tennessee. In 1934 he was called to St. John's, Washington, "the Church of the Presidents," just across Lafayette Square from the White House. In 1940 he went on to Boston's Byzantine Trinity Church, made famous by Phillips Brooks. Married, with...
Publishing peace came to Chattanooga, Tenn. last week. The peace brought new and greater Lebensraum for 40-year-old Groceryman Roy McDonald, who nine years ago started the Free Press to advertise his own grocery chain (60 stores) and succeeded so well that six years later he had driven to the wall George Fort Milton's once-powerful News...
...deal which largely ends economic competition between Chattanooga's two remaining papers and puts them in a position to make wartime operating economies, Groceryman McDonald became president of a new company which will pool circulation, advertising and mechanical staffs of the News-Free Press (evening) and the Chattanooga Times (morning). A bigger compliment to Groceryman McDonald was the agreement by the Chattanooga Times (the late great Adolph Ochs's steppingstone to the New York Times and still controlled by the Ochs family) to discontinue its evening edition. Started two years ago to give the fast-growing News-Free...