South suburbs' growth touted // Study dispels `myths'

Chicago Sun-Times | September 27, 1986| | Copyright

The south suburbs are growing, in some instances, faster than other parts of the Chicago suburban area, a study released yesterday by the Fantus Co. shows.

"The no-growth myth" is easily dispelled by looking at the facts, said Fantus researcher Jerry W. Szatan, who helped compile the 250-page study of the business climate of the south suburbs.

For the report, the area was defined as 44 suburbs roughly running from Orland Park east to Calumet City, south to Crete and west to Frankfort. The study compared this area with the west, northwest and north suburbs.

"We have been misunderstood, ...

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

IN OUR PAGES: 100, 75 AND 50 YEARS AGO 1958: New Pope Is John XXIII
Newspaper article from: ; ...s Square and joy throughout Italy. The new Pope chose the name of John XXIII. He was the second to use it, for Baldassare Cossa, a Neapolitan who claimed to be Pope from 1410 to 1415, also used it. By going back to a name which, in Catholic...
Typography Papers 6.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly ; ...inscriptions, including most of those that we think we already know in detail (such as the tomb of Martin V and Baldassare Cossa). Mosley's essay on Cresci is an extension of "Trajan Revived" (Alphabet 1964), the first--and still...
Medici men in suits Even bankers could be Renaissance men, says Paul Strathern
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London ; ...diocese even paid in whalebones). The Medici first gained the papal account by financing the disreputable ex-pirate Baldassare Cossa, a gamble which paid off when he became Pope Giovanni XXIII. Transmitting large sums of money from northern Europe...
De varietate fortunae.
Magazine article from: Renaissance Quarterly ; ...first half of the Quattrocento, which gave vent to Poggio's hatred and biting criticism of his betes noires, Baldassare Cossa (later Pope John XXIII), Eugenius IV, and most of all, the brutal soldier-cleric, Cardinal Giovanni Vitelleschi...
LETTERS: your views.(Features)
Newspaper article from: Coventry Evening Telegraph (England) ; ...the latter taking the title in order to somewhat mask the misdeeds of the former. The first John XXIII, known as Baldassare Cossa, before putting on the Fisherman's ring and sitting on St Peter's chair, made his crust in a rather unusual...

Find more facts and information related to the article "South suburbs' growth touted // Study dispels ..."