Word: cyruses
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...idea looked like the hottest thing in the Curtis publishing empire since Cyrus Curtis picked up the Saturday Evening Post for $1,000 in 1897. At least, that's the way it looked to J. Frank Beaman. Beaman tried it out on his boss, Curtis President Walter D. Fuller: Americans love to enjoy themselves, spend billions on their vacations, but have no first-rate magazine to help them enjoy their fun & games...
Since the days of Darius and Cyrus, the kingdom had descended far. It was still large (a fifth as big as the U.S.) and its mountains and desert contrasts were still dramatically scenic. But of Mohamed Reza's 15 million subjects a few thousand lived in lavish luxury, and almost all the rest in ragged poverty. At least eleven million of them had venereal disease. Most of the adults were opium addicts. Four out of every five children born died in infancy. Three out of every four who survived never learned to read or write...
...party's Storting members, Erling Wikborg, explained its principles last week to New York Timesman Cyrus L. Sulzberger. Said he: "During the war we learned for the first time what a pagan political system was like. . . . We are neither of the right nor of the left. . . . In social questions we have radical ideas, but some conservative leaders have promised to cooperate with...
...that Slav terrorists were raiding Greek villages. From Rome the Chicago Daily News's Balkan-wise Leigh White cabled: Marshal Tito had apparently launched his long-planned drive to expand federal Yugoslavia at the expense of Greek Macedonia. From Athens the New York Times's European Chief Cyrus Sulzberger reported: "There is a pattern behind these events linked to the politically homogeneous Governments of Greece's three northern neighbors [Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Albania], who are all ideologically tied to the Soviet Union." Was Russia, through her Balkan satellites, resuming a historic push toward a warm-water port...
...chief foreign correspondent, Cyrus Leo Sulzberger II, a star in his own right despite the fact that he is Publisher Sulzberger's nephew, took up residence in Paris...