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Word: adolph (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...against the Curtiss Flying Service, Inc., the first legal action of its kind in the history of New York courts. At the same time, Illinois courts were concerned with a novel phase of flying. Mrs. Gertrude B. Weingarten, mother of 6-year-old R. Paul Weingarten Jr., asked Justice Adolph Joseph Sabath to enjoin her husband (divorced) from taking their child for rides in an airplane, stressing the child's nervousness, irregular eating. Justice Sabath pondered, granted the injunction...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AERONAUTICS: Flights, Flyers: Jul. 16, 1928 | 7/16/1928 | See Source »

...President Coolidge sent a telegram to Adolph S. Ochs to congratulate him on having published the Chattanooga, Tenn., Times for 50 years and the New York Times for 32 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Office Hours | 7/9/1928 | See Source »

...Adolph S. Ochs, 70, of the New York Times, celebrated last week his soth anniversary as publisher of his other newspaper, the Chattanooga, Tenn., Times. Fifty guests (including the president of the Advertising Club of New York, members of the Merchants' Association, Chamber of Commerce, and many a newspaperman) were transported from Manhattan to Chattanooga on a special Ochs train. A banquet at Lookout Mountain Hotel (new) and the official designation of Mr. Ochs as "Citizen Emeritus of Chattanooga" were features. The Chattanooga Times put out an edition of 160 pages (64 in rotogravure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Fifty Years, Fifty Guests | 7/9/1928 | See Source »

...Adolph S. Ochs exploded into a denunciation and a challenge. If M. Siegfried didn't know what a great newspaper was, if he by any chance was unaware that the New York Times, pillar of respectability, printed all the news that's fit to print and not another line, if he had the insolence to name the Times or any other "great newspaper,"-well, he would find out what a libel suit was like. "Produce," wrote Publisher Ochs,† "a single example of a 'great newspaper' which is subservient to advertisers . . . name newspaper and owner." Name...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Publishers Fume | 7/2/1928 | See Source »

...real estate and touts great corporations in his syndicated editorials, is known to be director of no company. Roy Wilson Howard tends closely to his newspaper and affiliated enterprises. So also Conde-Nast, Cyrus Hermann Kotzschmar Curtis and the Booths (George G. and Ralph Harman) of Detroit, and Adolph Ochs. Messrs. Patterson and McCormick of the Chicago Tribune and Liberty are close to inherited interests in great corporations, not publishing, but they eschew directorates. Ogden M. Reid of the New York Herald-Tribune and Daniel Rhodes Hanna Jr. of the Cleveland News, like them inheritors of stock interests, were obliged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Railroad Director | 6/4/1928 | See Source »

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