Word: out-of-town
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
William D. Myers, public services assistant in the library, said yesterday construction may anger out-of-town users. "People have come up over the summer all the way from Tennessee and Virginia to use our collection, and they won't be too pleased if we can't make the books available," Myers added...
...drastic difference from the 1920s is that Munsonians no longer control their own town. The Ball Corp., now a diversified multinational, has moved its important operations elsewhere, and the Ball family itself is scattered, with diminished clout in Muncie. The local economy is now controlled from the out-of-town board rooms of large national and international corporations-and from Washington. Says Caplow: "The Federal Government has in effect taken over all the social welfare functions in Muncie. The care of the sick, the poor, the aged and the delinquent is all controlled by Washington...
...three papers could probably print without the pressmen, but not as long as the key deliverers continue to support the walkout. So until the two sides settle, New Yorkers will have to depend on out-of-town papers and radio or television stations to sate their appetite for news. And comics. Soupy? Eartha...
...private attorneys specializing in governmental relations. It is the latter group that gives the capital a kinship with the place where the California gold rush began in 1848. Established firms like Covington & Burling, with 185 attorneys, continue to grow at a brisk pace; new firms and branches of out-of-town firms are sprouting almost as fast, largely because of ever proliferating Government regulations. In the past three months alone, more than 1,200 new out-of-state attorneys have sought admission...
...columns and other frippery would have no place there. He introduced book reviews and a serious Sunday magazine, and started printing news about the city's growing financial community. Not just any news, but useful news, like the arrival times of mail ships and the names of visiting out-of-town buyers...