Word: omaha
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Omaha (population 222,800), with hired solicitors (American City Bureau) and 1,000 volunteers, raised $453,000 in its second successful drive in five years...
More far-sighted and cogent to those publishers who regard the Canadian industry as a monopoly, was the proposal of onetime Senator Gilbert Monell Hitchcock of the Omaha World-Herald. Said he: "Whatever the directors do of a temporary nature ought to be supplemented by some action towards permanent relief, such as developing a new supply of newsprint for the western part of the United States, possibly from Alaskan sources or a supply from European sources...
Duane Weills Rainbolt, of Omaha, Nebraska...
Politically dry as dry can be is Nebraska where every aid is given to the enforcement of Prohibition. Startling was last week's news that U. S. District Judge Joseph William Woodrough at Omaha had placed a large and. to Nebraska, alien obstacle in the path of U. S. dry agents by his ruling that they cannot legally search a domicile without warrant even though they see, hear and smell material evidence...
Bernard David Hanighen, of Omaha, Nebraska, was elected Chorister. An alumnus of the Hackley School, he is a member of the University Instrumental Clubs. Edward Mortimer Morris Warburg of New York City, a graduate of Middlesex School, was elected Orator of the Senior Class. He was one of the founders of the Harvard Society for Contemporary Art, whese exhibitions are shown at intervals throughout the winter. The position of Odist was won by Otto Eugene Schoen-Rene, of New York City. He prepared at the Blake School, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and is prominent as Pegasus of the Advocate. Douglas Payne Adams...