Word: sloganeered
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...year-old Enquirer, Cincinnati's only morning and Sunday paper, has been on the market for more than three years (TIME, May 3, 1948). Since the death of Owner John R. McLean,* the Enquirer, famed for its slogan "Solid Cincinnati Reads the Cincinnati Enquirer" has been held in trust for his heirs by Washington's American Security & Trust Co. The bank wanted to sell the paper; it thinks the newspaper market is at its peak. Last week, Times-Star Publisher Hulbert Taft, 74-year-old cousin of Senator Robert A. Taft, indicated that the bank probably would accept...
...years Finance Minister of the country. Mohammed Mossadegh entered politics in 1906. An obstinate oppositionist, he was usually out of favor and several times exiled. In 1919, horrified by a colonial-style treaty between Britain and Persia, he hardened his policy into a simple Persia-for-the-Persians slogan. While the rest of the world went through Versailles, Manchuria, the Reichstag fire, Spain, Ethiopia and a World War, Mossadegh kept hammering away at his single note. Nobody in the West heard...
...Then why the arms failure? The chief reason was that the Administration was more worried by a presidential campaign in 1952 than a world war. It tried to run the arms program in a way to inconvenience no one-worker, employer or consumer. "Business as usual" was the prevailing slogan. Unions gave up none of their wage demands or strike privileges; businessmen, in the words of one top executive, "too often moved heaven & earth, politically and otherwise, to keep civilian production going on as usual...
...probity when he describes his ability at shooting quail, and I know for sure he cheats at Canasta . . . Mr. Baruch's favorite statement, which he started using on President Wilson and has not abandoned since, is: 'What are the facts?' I hang him with his own slogan. 'What are the facts, Mr. Baruch? How did the booze get in your own backyard...
...what appeared to be an organized campaign of vandalism, a campaign booth was mysteriously dismantled, several posters were stolen, and "Contributions solicited here $25 a pint," was scribbled under a campaign slogan...