Word: cincinnati
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Archbishops Edward Mooney of Detroit, Samuel A. Stritch of Chicago, Francis J. Spellman of New York, John T. McNicholas of Cincinnati, John Gregory Murray of St. Paul, John J. Mitty of San Francisco, Joseph F. Rummel of New Orleans; Bishops John F. Noll of Fort Wayne, Karl J. Alter of Toledo, James H. Ryan of Omaha...
Buckeye State. Ohio swept out the Republican (Ed Schorr) machine, swept in a new kind of Democratic politician: gangling, idealistic, good-government crusader Frank Lausche, 48, mayor of Cleveland. A party independent, Frank Lausche beat a party hack, James Garfield ("Jovial Jim") Stewart, longtime mayor of Cincinnati and roly-poly, flag-waving, glad-handing master of political clich...
...book business looking for a first-rate buy (TIME, Oct. 9). Last week he thought he had found it. Dipping lightly into the odd $168,000,000 in his pockets, Tycoon Field (publisher of New York's PM, Chicago's Sun, syndicated Sunday weekly Parade, owner of Cincinnati's radio station WSAI) bought smart Simon and Schuster, one of the top merchandisers in the book business, and Pocket Books, Inc., which was 49% owned by Simon and Schuster officials. Publisher Field kept the purchase price...
Damned Spot. In Cincinnati, a sign on a locked cigar store read: "Out of cigars. Out of cigarets. Out of gum. Out of films. Out of stamps. Out of patience. Out of town...
...second largest university (first: New York University)-he said: "The post at Los Angeles is the only university position in the country which could take me from the University of Wisconsin. It is the University which I left [as professor of municipal administration] to become city manager of Cincinnati. I have deep roots in the Los Angeles community. I take this action with very real regrets...