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A collection of news and information related to World Columbian Exposition (1893) published by this site and its partners.

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    Nov 17, 2011 |Column| Herald Mail
  1. City Beautiful, City Park and the museum

     By Rebecca Massie Lane Special to The Herald-Mail When old age shall this generation waste,     Thou shalt remain, in midst of other woe     Than ours, a friend to man, to whom thou say'st,     'Beauty is truth, truth beauty,' that is all    ...

    Tags: Theodore Roosevelt, Cornell University, William Singer, Hagerstown (Washington, Maryland), Museums

  2. Feb 25, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  3. Chicago Ridge's homespun values lure homebuyers

    Shaped like a string of boxcars that tumbled off the CSX rail line, Chicago Ridge is a working-class southwestern suburb known for the regional mall that attracts shoppers like a magnet.
    Shaped like a string of boxcars that tumbled off the CSX rail line, Chicago Ridge is a working-class southwestern suburb known for the regional mall that attracts shoppers like a magnet. Thanks to its abundance of modest multifamily housing, Chicago...

    Tags: Chicago Restaurants, Lifestyle and Leisure, Lennar Corp., Rentals, Ted Nugent

  4. Feb 13, 2013 |Story| Orlando Sentinel
  5. Ripley's to mark World Sword Swallowers Day

    Several Ripley Entertainment attractions, including the Odditorium on Orlando's International Drive, will mark World Sword Swallowers Day with activities on Feb. 23. 
    Several Ripley Entertainment attractions, including the Odditorium on Orlando's International Drive, will mark World Sword Swallowers Day with activities on Feb. 23.  More than 20 sword swallowers will put on free shows. In Orlando, Chris Steele will be...

    Tags: Entertainment, International Drive, Esophageal cancer

  6. May 13, 2011 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  7. Magic bus: GM's Futurliner

    When the lights were switched on at the Chicago World's Fair on May 27, 1933, the city was celebrating "A Century of Progress." By the time the last visitor left the park two years later, 48 million people had marveled at the displays, including General Motors' technical tours de force: How Sound Stops Sound, The Magnetic Stove, a Photo Elastic Stress Study and Music on a Light Beam.
    When the lights were switched on at the Chicago World's Fair on May 27, 1933, the city was celebrating "A Century of Progress." By the time the last visitor left the park two years later, 48 million people had marveled at the displays, including General...

    Tags: Television, New York, Auction Service, Reggie Jackson, Arts and Culture

  8. Feb 26, 2013 |Story| RedEye
  9. A brief history of PBR's real blue ribbon

    Pabst Blue Ribbon is most associated with its birthplace in Milwaukee, but it’s the city of Chicago where the beer made its name—literally.
    For RedEye
    Pabst Blue Ribbon is most associated with its birthplace in Milwaukee, but it’s the city of Chicago where the beer made its name—literally. Not to be confused with the television channel that airs "Sesame Street," PBR was originally known as...

    Tags: World War I (1914-1918), PBS (tv network)

  10. Jun 26, 2005 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  11. The Millennium Park effect

    Tribune architecture critic
    NEW CATCH PHRASE was in the air after Frank Gehry's shimmering Guggenheim Museum made its spectacular debut eight years ago in the tattered shipbuilding city of Bilbao, Spain: "the Bilbao effect." The term, which sounded like weather forecasting jargon,...

    Tags: Steroids, Millennium Park, Road Transportation, Kidney Beans, Tourism and Leisure

  12. Jul 8, 2012 |Story| Chicago Tribune
  13. Dunes Country choo-choo

    MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. — To the uninitiated, driving along 11th Street through the downtown of this northern Indiana community can be an unnerving experience.
    MICHIGAN CITY, Ind. — To the uninitiated, driving along 11th Street through the downtown of this northern Indiana community can be an unnerving experience. While most motorists are accustomed to sharing the road with bicycles, few have ever had the...

    Tags: Beaches, Travel, Transportation, Arts, Tourism and Leisure

  14. Jun 21, 2006 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  15. Worshiping at the auto shrine

    Times Staff Writer
    In L.A., not all the stars are on the big screen, or bumping around Montana Avenue boutiques. Some of our finest performers are in the museums and private collections put together by Southern California's biggest car enthusiasts. Whether you're interested...

    Tags: Death, Otis Chandler, Frankenstein (movie, 1931), Sports, Car Engine Repair

  16. Aug 21, 2011 |Story| Aberdeen News
  17. 'Weasel' of nursery rhyme referred to yarn winder

    What's a weasel? It's an animal, of course, but in some parts of Montana you might put weasels on your ice cream - because some Montanans used to call M&Ms "weasels." And in the 1700s, when the nursery rhyme "Pop Goes the Weasel" was composed,...

    Tags: Germany, Toy Industry, New York, Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks, Hawaii

  18. Jul 27, 2011 |Story| KCPQ-LTV
  19. Old School frozen custard

    Old School has been proudly serving up delicious frozen custard in the Puget Sound area since 2007. 
    Q13 FOX News Online
    Old School has been proudly serving up delicious frozen custard in the Puget Sound area since 2007.  It is a smoother, creamier, and more flavorful than any super premium ice cream.  And it contains fewer calories, too! At Old School frozen custard...

    Tags: Lifestyle and Leisure, Coney Island, Ice Cream, Foods and Beverages

  20. Apr 10, 2011 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  21. Book review: 'The Last Greatest Magician in the World' by Jim Steinmeyer

    The Last Greatest Magician in the World
    Special to the Los Angeles Times
    The Last Greatest Magician in the World Howard Thurston Versus Houdini & the Battles of the American Wizards Jim Steinmeyer Tarcher/Penguin: 377 pp., $26.95 It takes some courage to write the biography of a man the reading public has mostly forgotten....

    Tags: Crime, Law and Justice, Music, Versus, Pennsylvania, Book

  22. Dec 7, 2008 |Story| Los Angeles Times
  23. New in paper: Stefan Zweig rediscovered

    "Lost Paradise" by Cees Nooteboom (Grove) Nooteboom's latest novel has two protagonists. One, a young and wealthy Brazilian woman, travels to Australia, hoping to recover her life after she has been raped and left for dead in a Sao Paolo favela. There...

    Tags: Suicide, Sex Crimes, Crime, Law and Justice, Movies, Rape

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World Columbian Exposition (1893) Photos
Megan Walburn, 26, skipped the flip-flops to bid summer...
(September 21, 2012)
Glimpsed at Flip-Flop Festivus: Megan Walburn
The Cypress Log Cabin, one of five "Century of Progress...
(June 29, 2012)
Cypress Log Cabin
Location of Photo: Beverly Shores, Indiana "1933 Chicag...
(August 17, 2011)
Tessa Marshall, 26, Valparaiso, IN