Word: chattanooga
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Died. Major General Julius Ochs Adler, 62, general manager of the New York Times, president and publisher of the Chattanooga (Tenn.) Times; of cancer of the pancreas; in Manhattan. A nephew of the late great New York Times Publisher Adolph S. Ochs, Adler won the D.S.C. and Silver Star with Oakleaf Cluster for heroism in World War I. In World War II he was assistant Sixth Infantry Division commander in Australia and New Guinea, after the war became commander of the 77th Division (Reserve...
Despite this, all seemed calm last week at Cutter's 20-acre Berkeley laboratory and at its $1,000,000 Chattanooga hospital solutions plant. The three executive Cutter brothers-Dr. Bob, 57, the president; Executive Vice President Ted, 53 (sales, production); Vice President Fred, 51 (research, controls)-were doing business as usual. Sales were running slightly ahead of last year's $14,850,000. The company had not discharged any of its 1,097 employees, and had, in fact, even added a new biologicals controls building to the 37 others at the Berkeley plant. Said Fred Cutter...
Died. Colonel Milton B. Ochs, 91, vice president of the Chattanooga Times Printing Company, and the last of a trio of newspaper-publishing brothers (others: Adolph S. Ochs of the New York Times, George W. Ochs of the Philadelphia Public Ledger); in Chattanooga...
From the State Times's new air-conditioned building, 32 editorial staffers (average age 32) work under Editor Norman Bradley, 42, former associate editor of the Chattanooga Times. Politically, the new daily, says Editor Bradley, is "Democratic by persuasion, independent by nature, middle-of-the-road but slightly more on the liberal side than most Mississippi papers." Its syndicated features include everyone from Right-Wing Columnist David Lawrence to Walter Lippmann, the Alsop brothers, Fair-Dealer Doris Fleeson and the Washington Post and Times Herald's Fair-Dealing Cartoonist Herblock. Since most of Jackson's leading businessmen...
...increasing out-of-state milk purchases except during a severe shortage, fixes the grocery price of milk 1?higher than the home-delivered price, even though it usually costs nearly 3? a quart less to sell through a grocery. Thus milk is 26? a quart in Birmingham, but in Chattanooga, a freely competitive market about four hours away by truck, milk is only 16? a quart. Wisconsin, because of highly efficient mass production and distribution methods, claims it could deliver fresh milk in Manhattan for 11.2? a quart wholesale (almost 1? less than the New York price...