Word: cincinnatis
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...right now they are talking about a new substance that can create a creamy-rich milkshake or a buttery spread that is not the least bit fattening. It is a zero-calorie dead ringer for dietary fat called sucrose polyester (SPE), and last week researchers at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center reported SPE's first successful test. The compound contains eight fatty acids instead of the three that make up ordinary fats. As a result, digestive enzymes cannot break it down, and it passes unaltered out of the body. In the Cincinnati study, ten chronically obese patients were...
...Rose a rippling, bulging 203. Their ways have been their own. The bigger man chops singles, the smaller one crashes home runs. While Yaz had to replace Ted Williams in Boston at 21, an impossible thing to do, Rose had to make it in his home town of Cincinnati, which ballplayers are almost never able to do. Both were nurtured and nudged by worshiped fathers who competed in organized sports into their 40s. In Bridgehampton, N.Y., between the potato-farming Yastrzemskis and the Skoniecznys on the maternal side, there were enough men and boys to field a Polish-American town...
...Cincinnati, the first Pete Rose was as legendary as the second. Rose reflects: "When I was young, people would stop me on the street to tell me I could never be what my father was." The elder Rose was a banker and a semiprofessional football player at 42, very tough and singleminded. In order to persuade Pete's Little League manager to let the boy switch-hit, the father promised not to take Pete away on the family's summer vacations. "I never set foot out of Cincinnati," Rose says uncomplainingly, "until I went off to the minor...
...there is a third Pete Rose, a carrot-topped little line-drive hitter. "I've never seen a twelve-year-old who can hit like Petey," says his father. "He called me from Cincinnati the other day to say he had been missing me and that his team had some easy games coming up. Couldn't he come to Philadelphia for a few days...
NAMED. Joseph L. Bernardin, 54, Archbishop of Cincinnati and former president of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, by Pope John Paul II to succeed the ate John P. Cardinal Cody as Archbishop of Chicago, the nation's largest archdiocese, with 2.5 million Roman Catholics. A liberal on social issues but a conservative on church doctrine, Bernardin was the subject of controversy last year when his name surfaced in the private journals of the Rev. Andrew Greeley, a writer and Cody critic. Greeley created a fictional scenario in which Bernardin succeeded the embattled Cody as part of a plot...