Word: newarks
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...said a front-page editorial in the Advocate, official newspaper of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Newark: "It is not gambling but the abuse of gambling that involves an immoral act . . ." Said Father Thomas J. Conroy of St. Cecilia's Church in Kearny: "A fight should be waged against such sins as birth control, divorce and euthanasia, not against the harmless practice, engaged in by older people, mostly women, of putting five little squares in a row on a card...
...party or profession. Other visitors included Democratic Mayor John Kenny of Jersey City, Louis Marciante, president of the New Jersey State Federation of Labor, Thomas Murray, president of the New York State Federation of Labor, George Levy, manager of Roosevelt Raceway, and former Democratic Mayor Meyer Ellenstein of Newark. Paul Troast, New Jersey construction tycoon and the G.O.P. candidate for governor, proved his friendship in another way: he had written to Governor Dewey in 1951, he admitted, to plead for a commutation for Joey...
...International General Electric, G.E. subsidiary; Consolidated Electric Lamp Co. of Danvers, Mass.; Hygrade Sylvania Corp. of Salem, Mass, (now Sylvania Electric Products, Inc.); Chicago Miniature Lamp Works; Tung-Sol Lamp Works of Newark, N.J. (now Tung-Sol Electric Inc.); N.V. Philips of The Netherlands, the only foreign defendant. Westinghouse and Corning Glass Works of Corning, N.Y. were named in the original suit but filed consent decrees...
Promising Situation. While Franz was straightening out production, Allen built up C.F. & I.'s corporate structure. He bought a plate and pipe plant in the burgeoning Delaware Valley (TIME, June 8), a pig iron and iron ore company in Pennsylvania. Last year he bought Newark's 112-year-old John A. Roebling's Sons Co., primarily a maker of wire rope, and an engineering firm. These acquisitions not only gave C.F. & I. diversification, but also made it a well-integrated organization...
...Association, which represents 98% of all U.S. banks. Ohio-born and educated, Reese worked his way through grade and high school selling papers, through Ohio State peddling milk and fraternity jewelry, went on to teach economics at Ohio State and Georgia Tech before starting as a teller with the Newark (Ohio) Park National Bank. He rose to president in 1926, has since boosted assets from $1,700,000 to $19 million. ¶ Walter B. Gerould, 53, vice president and comptroller for A. G. Spalding & Bros., became president, succeeding William T. Brown, who died recently. Gerould started selling Spalding...