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A few source like mentions

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  • Steinberg to Retire, Remain as Federated Consultant; Sullivan, Mettler, Borneo to Fill Top Posts At Macy's West Buisness Wire, Dec 16, 1999; "Borneo, a 35-year Macy's veteran, began his career in 1964 as an executive trainee at Bamberger's, moving through the ranks to become an administrator and store manager in 1972 and a vice president in 1974. He was promoted to senior vice president and director of merchandising for budget stores, and in 1977 was named to the Bamberger's executive committee and board of directors. After serving as senior vice president/merchandising from 1980-84, Borneo was named president of Macy's New Jersey in 1984 and president of Macy's California in 1989. In 1995 he was named vice chairman/director of stores for Macy's West, then a division of Federated."
  • Mangiafico urges in-store feeder to innovate - Edgar S. Mangiafico Nation's Restaurant News, Jan 30, 1984 by Rick Telberg; interview with foodservice vice president at Bamberger's of New Jersey.
  • Who Got Einstein's Office? Eccentricity and Genius at the Institute for Advanced Study. - book reviews Washington Monthly, Dec, 1988 by Nicholas Martin; "The book is a history of the Institute for Advanced Study, the private research institute founded in 1930 by Caroline Bamberger Fuld and her brother, Louis Bamberger, in Princeton, New Jersey. Not many people were in a position to make large philanthropic donations that year, but the Bambergers had just sold their highly profitable department store the summer before (they received their $25 million, much of it in cash, six weeks before Black Thursday). The Bambergers hoped the institute would be a haven where a select group of natural scientists, mathematicians, social scientists, and historians would spend their days thinking great thoughts, unmolested by the outside world."
  • Old Newark Memories - Bamberger's Department Store by Bill Newman. - personal essay, but might have useful bits in it.
  • COMPANY NEWS; Bamberger's Shift - NY times short bit on the removal of the Bamberger's name.

Bamburgers Building

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Seems as if the building was for a short time (1923-1926) the tallest in Newark, and that's w/o the antenna structure, the height of which is not included in the infobox, but would be interesting to know....

Bamburgers
General information
TypeRetail
Location131 Market Street
Completed1913 & 1923
Height
Roof67 m (220 ft)
Technical details
Floor count14
Design and construction
Architect(s)Jarvis Hunt

Djflem (talk) 19:18, 29 July 2010 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ [1]

Cultural References

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Would it be inappropriate to include a section called Cultural References to the Bamberger's article? 71.101.84.191 (talk) 20:04, 2 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Yes. SchuminWeb (Talk) 20:34, 2 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It depends. Some people object to them outright because they see them as collections of trivia. Other people believe that they are valid demonstrations of how pervasively known a topic has become. They can be either of those depending on the implementation. Sourced cultural references can have a place in articles, sometimes as a list but usually better presented in prose. You might want to bring it here to the talk page first before putting it in the article and get others opinions about the particular items you have in mind. Jim Miller See me | Touch me 22:12, 2 February 2011 (UTC)[reply]