Word: reappointed
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...years as chief investigator for the state's attorney, Tubbo had never jugged an important gangster. Chicago's Crime Commission had asked two state's attorneys not to reappoint him, but Tubbo had hung on to the job. He boasted a personal fortune, not very satisfactorily accounted for, of $300,000. After ex-Policeman William Drury and Lawyer Marvin Bas were murdered a month ago (TIME, Oct. 9), it developed that they were about to unload some dirt on Tubbo before the Kefauver Committee investigating organized crime...
Spokesmen for Yale asserted that the Shostakovich incident "had nothing to do" with the decision not to reappoint Marsalka. Assistant professors get reappointments for three year terms, and those may or may not be renewed. Marsalka was informed over a year ago that his appointment would not be continued after it expired this year...
...Board has lacked a chairman since January 1, when Truman refused to reappoint James M. Landis, former Law School Dean. Since then half a dozen men have turned down the job, chiefly because of the insufficient salary...
Harry Truman put off the disagreeable job of ousting Landis until almost the last minute. When he got around to it, 72 hours before the deadline, he did it with unusual bluntness. White House Secretary Charles G. Ross gave a bare announcement that the President did not intend to reappoint Chairman Landis...
...N.E.A. blacklisting hit North College Hill, the school board called a meeting. All five members decided to resign-"for the good of the community." Probate Judge Chase M. Davies took over as a one-man board until a new election could be held. His first step: to reappoint Superintendent Cook for another three years...