Word: shared
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Dates: during 1960-1960
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Declaration of War. The young Roman Catholic Irishman was destined to play a significant role in Utah journalism. From railroad clerking, John Francis Fitzpatrick went on to be secretary to another Irishman, Thomas Kearns, former U.S. Senator from Utah (1901-05) and millionaire silver miner. With a share of his fortune, Kearns bought the Tribune in 1913. After his death, Kearns's heirs named John Francis Fitzpatrick publisher of the Tribune...
...Sunday field. The Tribune, which in 1930 had bought the News's afternoon rival, the Telegram, now sold it to the News (which became the Deseret News and Salt Lake Telegram). Then the once-bitter rivals joined hands by forming the Newspaper Agency Corp., through which both papers share the same printing plant and the same advertising, circulation and distribution organizations. They remain rivals-and staunch rivals-only editorially. President of the combined operation: John Francis Fitzpatrick...
...orders and sales for the metal turn up, warned Reynolds Metals Co. president, Richard S. Reynolds Jr. His company has already cut back capital spending, soon may slow market and" new-product research. In the first half of 1960 Reynolds' earnings fell to $13 million and 66? per share v. $21 million and $1.10 per share the first half of last year...
Where does the oil wealth go? The government's share goes largely into a bureaucracy that keeps the capital, Caracas, satisfied. But private wealth is in flight, draining reserves from $1 billion in 1958 to $600 million now. Castro-imitating hotheads have scared off investors by demanding more government controls. Partly as a concession to the leftists, Betancourt has canceled new oil concessions and slashed rents 25%, shaking confidence still more. Chronic crisis-Betancourt's hands are only freshly healed from Dominican Dictator Rafael Trujillo's attempt last June to dynamite him to bits -further contributed...
Pine Bluff (pop. 43,000) is a town that has its share of night riders and racism. John D. York was soon fired from the factory job that he had held for twelve years. And as school opening loomed last week, the entire Sunday service at his Galilee Baptist Church was built around Delores. Peering down at the child, the Negro minister intoned: "But they cried out the more, saying, Let him be crucified" (Matthew 27: 23). For three minutes the weeping congregation stood in silent prayer for her safety...