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Word: cincinnatis (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Morris Shapiro, of Cambridge, Massachusetts; Robert Chester Smith, Jr., of Detroit, Michigan; Andrew Joseph Torielli, of Watertown, Massachusetts; Richard Williams Vilter, of Cincinnati, Ohio; George Beard Walker, of Albany, New York; Arthur William Well, of Cedarhurst, New York; David Maxwell Weil, of Chicago, Illinois...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PHI BETA KAPPA PICKS 32 SENIORS AND JUNIOR EIGHT | 11/26/1932 | See Source »

...Arundel, Sussex home, handsome, patrician John Galsworthy, 65. learned he had been awarded this year's Nobel Prize for Literature. To Dr. Irvinq Langmuir, 51, went the Nobel award for Chemistry (see p. 24). Left: by Mrs. Annie Sinton Taft, relict of Publisher Charles Phelps Taft of the Cincinnati Times-Star, sister-in-law of the late Chief Justice William Howard Taft: $5,637,233.41 each to Daughters Jane Taft Ingalls (mother of David Sinton Ingalls, defeated last week for Ohio's Governorship) and Anna Louise Taft Semple: $1,000,000 to the Cincinnati Institute of Fine Arts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Nov. 21, 1932 | 11/21/1932 | See Source »

Murray Season good '00, former Mayor of Cincinnati and authority on municipal government, will give a series of lectures here under the Godkin foundation. The lectures will begin Monday, November 28 at 4 o'clock in Emerson D, and the remaining lectures will be given on Wednesday, November 30, and Friday, Monday and Wednesday, December...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Godkin Lecture Series | 11/18/1932 | See Source »

...been placed out for a second time before the sun set and they had to be taken down again. After a drive through flagless streets, Secretary Adams snapped: "If Roosevelt is elected the homes and lives of 100,000,000 American people might be in jeopardy." By radio from Cincinnati Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth delivered an anti-Roosevelt speech which she had written out in longhand. The Democratic campaign based on "distress and discontent" struck her as "an unusually ignoble policy." Said T. R.'s first child: "I've seen many instances of unfairness in political campaigns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Carrying the Country | 11/14/1932 | See Source »

...Secretary of the Treasury Mills, rich and rotund, continued to be the most leather-lunged stumpster in the Cabinet. Cincinnati last week heard him blame the possibility of Governor Roosevelt's election for widespread fear among businessmen. At Toledo he declared that a Democratic victory would be "the road to ruin." At Utica he denounced President Hoover's opponent as a "trimmer." At Worcester, Mass. he insisted that all who vote for Governor Roosevelt are casting "a vote of despair and forlorn hope-the forlorn hope in the magic of a mere change...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Campaigners | 11/7/1932 | See Source »

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