Word: cincinnati
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Last week, thanks to the enterprise of two bustling Ohio businessmen, the monastery was finally put together on U.S. soil. In North Miami Beach, Fla., workmen fitted the last of the 35,000 stones in place, and the two businessmen, E. Raymond Moss and William S. Edgemon of Cincinnati, got ready to open the monastery to sightseers. Moss and Edgemon had bought the stones at a bargain after Hearst's death in 1951, and packed them off to Florida. In the summer of 1952, a small army of architects, masons and other workmen started the laborious job of unpacking...
...activities. "I spend 80% of my time in planning programs." he says. The other 20% of the conductor's work is what he calls "transferring my ideas to the musicians." Budapest-born, he has been transferring his ideas to U.S. orchestras since 1922. He led the Cincinnati Symphony for nine years, was largely responsible for the orchestra's fine reputation. In 1938 he took the ambitious but struggling Pittsburgh Symphony and put it on its feet. Five years ago he went to the Metropolitan Opera, where his whip-crack performances dazzled the public...
Next fall's freshman manager will be Henry H. Gaffney '56 of Newtown and Eliot House. George V. Ziniger '55 of Cincinnati and Dunster House will serve as junior varsity manager for the second straight season Gaffney succeeds Milton J. Kostick '55 of Lynn and Adams House...
...nothing but a drafty old shack set up on rickety stilts. It was so dilapidated that when a new teacher arrived last fall, she took one look at it and hurried away to Cincinnati. Last month all 30 pupils went out on strike. They would not return, they said, until they got a new building...
...knew that P.R. had been declared unconstitutional in some states; that 24 cities had experimented with it during the past 50 years; that 16 of the 24 cities had repudiated it; and that only 8 cities in the United States now employed it. Only 3 students knew that Cincinnati used the system. None knew that apart from the 4 Massachusetts cities already named, the only other cities in the United States using the P.R. system are Cincinnati and Hamilton (Ohio), Hopkins (Minn.) and Oak Ridge (Tenn...