Word: cincinnati
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...over 40 hours a week: electrical manufacturing, lumber & millwork, paper & pulp.) Last week too the U. S. Civil Service Commission was scouting for 600 skilled workers for the Frankford (Philadelphia) arsenal. In Ohio, 4,500 production workers will be needed for a new shell-loading plant near Cleveland; at Cincinnati, Wright Aeronautical's new engine plant will shortly be looking for anywhere from 6,000 to 12,000 skilled machinists, other specialty metal tradesmen. This week Federal Security Administrator Paul V. McNutt reported that employers are waiving usual labor requirements, taking what they can get. He noted that...
...vote by counties (see map) illustrated the great main trend of the 1940 election: industrial centres had voted for President Roosevelt, rural counties for Wendell Willkie. Every city of more than 400,000, with the exception of Cincinnati, went for President Roosevelt. The President won Illinois by only 94,000 votes. But Chicago gave him a plurality of 295,206, and the same city-county discrepancy appeared in New York, Missouri, Wisconsin. He carried approximately 54.6% of the popular vote of the nation (see p. 67). He carried approximately 52.5% of the popular vote outside the Solid South (where, nevertheless...
Ernest Kahn '41, Easton Pa.; Martin Kalmanoff '41, Woodmere, L.I., N.Y.; Arthur B. Kern '41, Brooklyn N.Y.; Brian Kiely '43, Cincinnati, Ohio.; Marvin A. Klemes '42, Long Beach, L.I., N.Y.; Leif L. Dundsen '42, Columbus...
Irving M. Fried '42, Strafford, Pa.; Frank S. Fuesner '42, Cincinnati, Ohio.; William Gay '41, New Hartford, Conn.; Viasios Georgian '41, North Quincy, Mass.; Thomas P. Glym '42, Colebrook, Conn.; Edwin B. Good all Jr. '41, Newton Center, Mass...
Richard Herr '43, of Eliot House and Cincinnati, Ohio...