Word: hilton
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DIED. Jonathan Daniels, 79, longtime editor of The News and Observer of Raleigh, eloquent voice of Southern moderation, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt's last press secretary; on Hilton Head Island, S.C. Daniels succeeded his father Josephus as editor of the family-owned newspaper in 1933. In 1942, he joined Roosevelt's Administration, becoming press secretary shortly before Roosevelt died in 1945. He returned to the Observer, shirking administrative duties but excelling as an editorial writer who advocated a non-confrontational approach to integrating the South during the 1950s and 1960s. Daniels also wrote more than a dozen books...
...swap involves the Cosco Chemicals Co. of Indianapolis, a division of Kidde, Inc. Cosco is boosting its production of cleansing products by about 20%, trading the cleansers to Binn for $500,000 worth of services including TV and radio advertising time. Binn plans to trade the cleansers to Hilton and Sheraton hotels, receiving in return room spaces plus food and bar credits, which he will offer to other Atwood Richards clients. At no point during the deal will money change hands...
...furniture outfit, has established its corporate headquarters, complete with its own hotel to accommodate company personnel. Just a few miles to the west, Union Carbide is settling into its new corporate headquarters on a 674-acre site purchased in 1976 for $14 million. Near by is the Danbury Hilton Inn and Conference Center, which opened last summer to handle the flow of business travelers to Union Carbide. A 250-room Sheraton now on the drawing boards will compete with the Hilton for Danbury's new and generally well-heeled visitors. "This is a city in transition," boasts Dyer, leaning...
...insane act: shooting a President to win the affections of a movie star. The legal definition of madness, however, is a bit more exacting (see LAW). Last week lawyers for John Hinckley, 26, the man who wounded President Reagan and three others on March 30 outside the Washington Hilton Hotel, declared in a court brief that they will argue Hinckley's innocence by reason of insanity. In a case where the facts of the crime are so starkly clear-the defense admits to the shooting-an insanity plea may be Hinckley's only chance for acquittal...
Last week's sessions did not answer many of Rosenthal's questions, and even raised some new ones. For example, Government documents record at least one exchange in which a representative of Kuwait, whose holdings include Baltimore's Hilton Hotel, told U.S. officials that his country might stop pumping oil if the level of Kuwait's investments were revealed...