Word: mccormick
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...basketball players Pat McCormick and George Hauptfuhrer, as well as an ex-football man, Mary Jenkins, form the Crimson hurdling corps at the moment. McCormick, who will do both the lows and highs, was an all Ohio scholastic hurdler. He's a Sophomore. Hauptfuhrer, this year's basketball captain, will run the 110 highs and will also high jump. He will be aided in both events by Jenkins who came here from Tufts back...
...against MacArthur's collection of fellow travelers: William Randolph Hearst, Colonel McCormick, Mayor Curley...
...Anne McCormick's sharp reporting and coolheaded analysis of the news have won her a wide audience, including many an admiring and envious member of her own profession. This week her work also won her the Overseas Press Club's award for the best interpretive foreign correspondence of 1947. When she returns to the U.S. this week, she will add the award (a sheepskin citation and a gold watch) to an assortment of trophies that includes the first major Pulitzer Prize (1937) ever awarded a woman journalist...
...Tyro. Although never a cub in the Times shop, Mrs. McCormick schooled herself for years before filing a cable. British-born (in Wakefield, Yorkshire, of American parents) Anne O'Hare grew up in Columbus, Ohio, went to St. Mary of the Springs Academy ('98) and the College of St. Mary of the Springs. In Cleveland she worked as associate editor of the weekly Catholic Universe Bulletin, on which her mother, Poet Teresa O'Hare, was once woman's-page editor...
...wife of Francis J. McCormick,* a prospering Dayton engineer and importer, she went along on his European buying trips, studied every country they visited, wrote a few pieces for the Times magazine section. In 1921, when they were about to sail for Europe once again, she jotted a timid note to the late, great Carr V. Van Anda, Times managing editor, asking if she might send him some dispatches from abroad. Van Anda wired her: "Try it." She did and impressed him with her shrewd judgment of Benito Mussolini ("Italy is hearing the master's voice") when other correspondents...