Word: maier
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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City Turned Off. While the finger pointing and maneuvering for advantage dominated the headlines and gave a foretaste of urban violence as a 1968 political issue, officials at all tiers of Government were obviously learning some lessons from the summer chaos. On the front line, Milwaukee Mayor Henry Maier showed that advance planning and determined action could contain violence, if not prevent it. Last year Maier quietly gave his police force intensive training in riot control. He also prepared an emergency plan that had the virtue of simplicity: in the event of trouble, he would simply turn the city...
...violence and the complaints of many who feel that a priest has no business meddling so deeply in civil affairs. Archbishop William Cousin has refused to call off Father Groppi. He has even, through an editorial in the local Catholic newspaper, given his tacit approval. Milwaukee Mayor Henry Maier and at least one judge have quietly dropped Eagle membership since Groppi began his crusade, and last week some 40 other clergymen, from nearly every faith, joined him in opposing the discriminatory clause...
...used to overcome some of the problems of group poverty that are the real plague of the present system? Use 2-S to broaden the base of higher education by granting it with special largesse and tolerance among those less privileged groups that may require additional encouragement. Charles S. Maier...
More Fun. The new rivalry is very much the doing of Journal Publisher and President Victor Irwin ("Dutch") Maier, 65, who felt that competition would benefit both papers. After the merger, the Journal hands who crossed over-among them Assistant Managing Editor Harvey W. Schwandner, now the Sentinel's executive editor-were told that the last thing Dutch Maier wanted was a morning edition of the Journal. "No other two-paper operation that I know about," says Lindsay Hoben, Journal editor and vice president, "grants the autonomy that our papers have." The facts bear him out. Last year...
...What the news press and the American people need at this time," said Maier, "is an authoritative and clear-cut assurance from this Administration that there is no place in its program for the use of the lie as an instrument of national policy." Editors and publishers are "concerned," he added, "when an Administration official speaks of using news as a weapon in the cold war, of controlling and managing the flow of news, and even of the Government's 'right...