Word: mccormick
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...quarterbacks in New England, the Crimson's Charlie Ravenel and Massachusett's John McCormick, meet face to face this afternoon as the varsity entertains the Redmen in what should be a repeat of last year's free-scoring contest. Kick-off time at the Stadium...
...reported on the answer from leading suffragettes in a cover story about Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt. battle-worn president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. Some woman would indeed become President one day, said TIME'S cover subject of April 23, 1928. high-born Mrs. Ruth Hanna McCormick of Illinois, who that year began her quest for high office by being elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, later (1930) ran for the U.S. Senate-and lost. The two women who have come closer to the White House than any of their sisters-by reaching Cabinet level-have...
Died. Chesser M. Campbell, 62, publisher of the Chicago Tribune and president of the Tribune Co. (a complex of 14 corporations including two shipping lines and the New York Daily News) since 1955, top man of the triumvirate that replaced the irreplaceable Colonel Robert R. McCormick; of heart disease; in Baie Comeau, Que. A onetime subscription solicitor who spent much of his 39-year Trib career as the paper's shrewd, aggressive advertising manager, Campbell once received a memo from the colonel's walnut-paneled office stating, "We carry a line over the classified ad section reading...
...after the first two games, the Giants, at least, began to agree with the fans about San Francisco's new park. In those games, the Giants beat the Cardinals by 3-1 and 6-1, on three-hitters by Right-Hander Sam Jones and Left-Hander Mike McCormick. Said a satisfied Giant: "This is a park for ballplayers." The Cardinals felt differently. Said St. Louis' Stan Musial: "You'd think they'd ask a few ballplayers before they built a park...
...last week, "must be the image of a man, whether you agree with him or not." Whereupon he invoked the three images he rated most highly: The New York Times's Arthur Hays Sulzberger, the late William Randolph Hearst, the Chicago Tribune's late Colonel Robert R. McCormick...