Word: cincinnatis
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Like Philip Schechter, Martin Siegel has a jaundiced view of Reform Judaism. He, too, is 37: the two men, in fact, were classmates at Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. There the resemblance ends. Schechter's anger is a howl from the pulpit: Siegel's is a whine from the swimming pool...
Disposing of a newspaper, even a profitable one, can sometimes be a problem. E.W. Scripps Co., owner of the 18-paper Scripps-Howard chain, had been directed by the Justice Department in 1964 to sell its majority stock interest in Cincinnati's money-making morning Enquirer (1970 profit: $2,100,000) and thus break up the Scripps-Howard monopoly in the city. Scripps also owns the evening Post & Times-Star. But finding an acceptable buyer for the Enquirer has given Scripps fits...
...Scripps was willing. But four minority stockholders sued to prevent the sale, claiming the price was too low. Then Scripps announced last month an impending sale to the Blue Chip Stamps Co. of California. That move stimulated a bid of $40 a share from American Financial Corp., a Cincinnati-based holding company. Delighted at the prospect of turning over the paper to a local company, Scripps switched signals and said it would sell to American Financial...
...suspension of the national law promises some savings in the construction of garden apartments and other low-rise rental units. In Atlanta, Louisville, Pittsburgh, Nashville, Cincinnati and other metropolitan areas where commercial construction is unionized but most housing projects are not, builders have been reluctant to erect even heavily subsidized apartments because of the prevailing-wage law. "I haven't been building any rental projects under the Federal Housing Administration," says Louisville Builder George Martin. "Now that Davis-Bacon is suspended, I'm going to start planning some...
...have long placed preemies in temperature-controlled incubators, where some cooling occurs each time the baby is fed or treated. Now there is another way. After experiments with hooded bags of the bubbled, air-pocketed polyethylene material used to package glassware, a team of researchers at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center has found that the stuff can prevent damage to kids as well as to merchandise. In a test involving 85 newborn babies, they discovered that the temperatures of unpackaged infants fell by more than 2° during the first 40 minutes of life. But the temperature drop...