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Ranally city rating system

The Ranally city rating system is a tool developed by Rand McNally & Co. to classify U.S. cities based on their economic function. The system is designed to reflect an underlying hierarchy whereby consumers and businesses go to a city of a certain size for a certain function; some functions are widely available and others are only available in the largest cities.

The system was developed for Rand McNally by geographer Richard L. Forstall and released in 1964. The city rankings are updated periodically in the Rand McNally Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide, an annual two-volume set, which is available in many libraries. Among the criteria for categorization are retail sales, newspaper circulation, and the presence of universities and hospitals and corporate headquarters. The size of the city's tributary area is critical to determining whether it will be rated a 2, 3, or 4. As of 2006, there are 1492 cities rated.

The system consists of a number and a letter. The number reflects a city's importance in the national hierarchy. Nationally important business centers are ranked 1. Regional business centers are ranked 2. Significant local business centers are ranked 3 and business centers whose importance is purely local are ranked 4. the letter reflects its importance in its own area. Doubled letters serve to distinguish centers within a class. The most important center in a market (trading area) is given some kind of A. Other business centers in the same market area will be given B or C depending on their importance. For example, Dallas is rated 1-AA (a nationally important business center) and Fort Worth is rated 2-BB. B cities constitute basic trading centers, while C cities do not.

Rand McNally divides the country into basic trading areas (487 as of 2008), each of which has exactly one A-rated city. The basic trading areas are aggregated into major trading areas, of which there are 51. The Federal Communications Commission uses these areas for determining wireless territory boundaries.[1]

New York City has always been given the unique rating 1-AAAA due to its preeminent status in the national hierarchy. Chicago was originally the only other city rated 1-AAA as having influence over a large area of the country. In 1988, Los Angeles was similarly given a 1-AAA rating. Thirteen cities are given the rating 1-AA as major national business centers: Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Miami, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C.

Ranally city rating Description Examples (* indicates a complete listing)
1-AAAA Unique rating for New York New York City*
1-AAA Unique rating for Chicago and Los Angeles Chicago, Los Angeles*
1-AA Major national business centers Atlanta, Boston, Cleveland, Dallas, Detroit, Houston, Miami, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, St. Louis, San Francisco, and Washington, D.C. (13 cities)*
1-A Other national business centers Baltimore, Cincinnati, Columbus, Denver, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Milwaukee, New Orleans, Oklahoma City, Phoenix, Portland, San Antonio, San Diego, and Seattle (14 cities)*
2-AA Major regional business centers Albany, Albuquerque, Allentown, Austin, Baton Rouge, Birmingham, Buffalo, Charlotte, Columbia, Dayton, Des Moines, El Paso, Grand Rapids, Harrisburg, Hartford, Honolulu, Jackson, Jacksonville, Knoxville, Las Vegas, Lexington, Little Rock, Louisville, Madison, Memphis, Nashville, New Haven, Norfolk, Omaha, Orlando, Peoria, Providence, Raleigh, Richmond, Rochester, NY, Sacramento, Salt Lake City, Shreveport, Spokane, Springfield, MA, Syracuse, Tampa, Toledo, Tucson, Tulsa, West Palm Beach, Wichita, and Youngstown (48 cities)*
2-BB Secondary major regional business centers Akron, Fort Lauderdale, Fort Worth, Oakland, St. Paul, St. Petersburg, San Jose, Wilmington, DE (8 cities)*
2-CC Same as 2-BB, but not constituting a basic trading center Newark*
2-A Other regional business centers Amarillo, Anchorage, Augusta, GA, Bakersfield, Beaumont, Canton, Charleston, SC, Charleston, WV, Chattanooga, Colorado Springs, Corpus Christi, Davenport, Daytona Beach, Erie, Eugene, Evansville, Fayetteville, NC, Flint, Fort Myers, Fort Wayne, Fresno, Green Bay, Greensboro, Greenville, SC, Huntington, WV, Kalamazoo, Lafayette, LA, Lancaster, PA, Lansing, Lubbock, McAllen, Melbourne, Mobile, Modesto, Montgomery, Pensacola, Portland, ME, Reading, Reno, Roanoke, Rockford, Saginaw, Salem, OR, Sarasota, Savannah, Scranton, South Bend, Springfield, IL, Springfield, MO, Stockton, Worcester (51 cities)*
2-B Secondary regional business centers Clearwater, Newport News, Tacoma, Trenton, Virginia Beach, and Winston-Salem (6 cities)*
2-C Same as 2-B, but not constituting a basic trading center Ann Arbor, Bridgeport, Riverside, and San Bernardino (4 cities)*
2-S Suburbs analogous to 2-C cities Anaheim, Arlington, Costa Mesa, Dearborn, Hialeah, Hollywood, FL, Long Beach (the largest city classified by Rand McNally as a suburb), Mesa, Paramus, Pasadena, Santa Ana, Southfield, MI, Stamford, Torrance, Troy, MI, White Plains (16 suburbs)*
3-AA Major significant local business centers Abilene, TX, Albany, GA, Alexandria, LA, Altoona, PA, Appleton, WI, Asheville, NC, Atlantic City, NJ, Bangor, ME, Billings, MT, Biloxi, MS, Binghamton, NY, Bloomington, IL, Boise, ID, Brownsville, TX, Burlington, VT, Cedar Rapids, IA, Champaign, IL, Charlottesville, VA, Columbus, GA, Decatur, IL, Duluth, MN, Eau Claire, WI, Elmira, NY, Fargo, ND, Florence, AL, Fort Smith, AR, Gainesville, FL, Huntsville, AL, Jackson, MI, Johnstown, PA, Kingsport, TN, La Crosse, WI, Lafayette, IN, Lake Charles, LA, Lakeland, FL, Laredo, TX, Lawton, OK, Lima, OH, Lincoln, NE, Longview, TX, Lynchburg, VA, Macon, GA, Manchester, NH, Mansfield, OH, Medford, OR, Midland, TX, Monroe, LA, Muncie, IN, Muskegon, MI, New London, CT, Ocala, FL, Odessa, TX, Parkersburg, WV, Poughkeepsie, NY, Provo, UT, Pueblo, CO, Rochester, MN, St. Joseph, MO, Salinas, CA, San Angelo, TX, Santa Barbara, CA, Sioux City, IA, Sioux Falls, SD, Tallahassee, FL, Terre Haute, IN, Texarkana, TX, Topeka, KS, Tuscaloosa, AL, Tyler, TX, Utica, NY, Visalia, CA, Waco, TX, Waterloo, IA, Wheeling, WV, Wichita Falls, TX, Wilmington, NC, Yakima, WA, and York, PA (78 cities)*
3-BB Secondary major significant local business centers Durham, NC, Fall River, MA, Gastonia, NC, Hampton, VA, New Bedford, MA, Niagara Falls, NY, Monterey, CA, Ogden, UT, Pawtucket, RI, Schenectady, NY, Spartanburg, SC, Springfield, OH, Waterbury, CT, and Wilkes-Barre, PA (14 cities)*
3-CC Same as 3-BB, but not constituting a basic trading center Boulder, CO, Everett, WA, Oxnard, CA, Racine, WI, Santa Rosa, CA, Ventura, CA, and Warwick, RI (7 cities)*
3-SS Suburbs analogous to 3-CC cities Alexandria, VA, Arlington, VA, Aurora, CO, Aurora, IL, Bellevue, WA, Beverly Hills, CA, Bloomington, MN, Brockton, MA, Burlington, MA, Cambridge, MA, Cherry Hill, NJ, Concord, CA, Danbury, CT, Edina, MN, El Cajon, CA, Fairfax, VA, Framingham, MA, Fremont, CA, Fullerton, CA, Glendale, CA, Greensburg, PA, Hackensack, NJ, Hayward, CA, Huntington Beach, CA, Jersey City, NJ, Joliet, IL, Kansas City, KS, Lakewood, CO, Lawrence, MA, Livonia, MI, Lowell, MA, Mountain View, CA, Newport Beach, CA, Newton, MA, Norwalk, CT, Orange, CA, Overland Park, KS, Palo Alto, CA, Pomona, CA, Pontiac, MI, Rockville, MD, San Leandro, CA, San Mateo, CA, Schaumburg, IL, Scottsdale, AZ, Santa Monica, CA, Skokie, IL, Sterling Heights, MI, Vancouver, WA, Walnut Creek, CA, Warren, MI, Waukegan, IL, Wayne, NJ, Woodbridge, NJ, and Yonkers, NY (55 suburbs)*
3-A Other significant local business centers Athens, GA, Anderson, IN, Cheyenne, WY, Fond du Lac, WI, Fort Pierce, FL, Grand Forks, ND, Hagerstown, MD, Redding, CA (200 cities)
3-B Secondary significant local business centers Meriden, CT, Fitchburg, MA, Johnson City, TN, Port Arthur, TX (58 cities)
3-C Same as 3-B, but not constituting a basic trading center Ames, IA, Rock Hill, SC, Troy, NY (51 cities)
3-S Suburbs analogous to 3-C cities Arlington Heights, IL, Chula Vista, CA, Edison, NJ, Midwest City, OK, New Rochelle, NY, North Charleston, SC, Somerville, MA, Wyoming, MI (180 suburbs)
4-A Other local business centers Sierra Vista, AZ, Bemidji, MN, Kalispell, MT, Rolla, MO (79 cities)
4-B Secondary local business centers Cedar Falls, IA, Kearney, NE, Springdale, AR, Urbana, IL (90 cities)
4-C Same as 4-B, but not constituting a basic trading center Carson City, NV, Conway, AR, DeKalb, IL, Dover, NH, Lodi, CA (155 cities)
4-S Suburbs analogous to 4-C cities Carrollton, TX, Compton, CA, Hillsboro, OR, Kirkland, WA, Mount Vernon, NY, West Haven, CT (361 suburbs)

Notes: The B and C cities are secondary because they are in the same market area as a city rated A.

While those are only abstract examples of the ratings, consider how the system works in practice with the example of Ohio. Rand McNally conceives of Ohio as consisting of nineteen markets (trading areas) with some peripheral counties being contained in trading areas of other states. The table below shows the nineteen trading areas in order of hierarchy. Each has an A-rated city. Some also have other rated cities and suburbs.

Example: Ohio

Trading area A-rated city Other cities Suburbs
Cleveland-Akron Cleveland (1-AA) Akron (2-BB), Wooster (3-C) Elyria, Euclid, Lorain, Mentor, Middleburg Heights, Parma (all 3-S), Barberton, Beachwood, Bedford, Brooklyn, Cleveland Heights, Cuyahoga Falls, Fairlawn, Kent, Lakewood, Mayfield Heights, Medina, North Olmsted, Painesville, Ravenna, Richmond Heights, Willoughby (all 4-S)
Cincinnati Cincinnati (1-A) Hamilton (3-C), Middletown (3-C), Maysville, KY (4-C) Florence, KY, Springdale,(both 3-S), Covington, KY, Fairfield, Newport, KY (all 4-S)
Columbus Columbus (1-A) Delaware, Lancaster, Newark (all 3-C), Mount Vernon (4-C) Upper Arlington, Whitehall (both 4-S)
Dayton-Springfield Dayton (2-AA) Springfield (3-BB), Bellefontaine, Celina, Greenville, Piqua, Troy (all 4-C), Trotwood, Xenia (both 4-S)
Toledo Toledo (2-AA) Bowling Green, Fremont (both 4-C) Maumee (4-S)
Youngstown-Warren Youngstown (2-AA) Warren (3-B) Niles (3-S)
Canton-New Philadelphia Canton (2-A) New Philadelphia (3-B), Dover (3-C), Alliance (4-C), Coshocton (4-C), Massillon (4-C)
Lima Lima (3-AA)
Mansfield Mansfield (3-AA) Ashland (4-C) Ontario (4-S)
Ashtabula Ashtabula (3-A)
Chillicothe Chillicothe (3-A)
Findlay-Tiffin Findlay (3-A) Tiffin (4-B)
Marion Marion (3-A)
Portsmouth Portsmouth (3-A)
Sandusky Sandusky (3-A)
Steubenville-Weirton Steubenville (3-A) Weirton, WV (4-B)
Zanesville-Cambridge Zanesville (3-A) Cambridge (4-B)
Athens Athens (4-A)
East Liverpool-Salem East Liverpool (4-A) Salem (4-B)

The system is applied by businesses seeking to serve a network of customers with the greatest efficiency. For example, a company that services elevators or a wholesaler of paper bags would want to locate its field representatives primarily in A rated cities. The Rural Health Research Center at the University of Minnesota published a report in 2008 on access to physicians in rural areas which uses the system to evaluate access to physicians in rural areas.[2]

See also

References

  • Rand McNally Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide, 136th edition, 2005, Skokie, Ill.: Rand McNally. A complete description of the system is found at Volume 1, pp. 7–8, and rosters of the ratings appear on pp. 74–87 and 129–131.
  • Richard L. Forstall, ed. Rand McNally city rating guide: a completely new concept in analyzing markets and planning sales and advertising programs in the 1090 principal business centers of the United States. Chicago: Rand McNally, 1964.
  1. ^ http://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/data/maps/mta.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ Ira Moscovice, et al., "Options for Increasing the Supply of Primary Care Physicians in Rural Minnesota," Rural Health Research Center, Division of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, January 2008, (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-20. Retrieved 2008-02-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

ranally, city, rating, system, tool, developed, rand, mcnally, classify, cities, based, their, economic, function, system, designed, reflect, underlying, hierarchy, whereby, consumers, businesses, city, certain, size, certain, function, some, functions, widely. The Ranally city rating system is a tool developed by Rand McNally amp Co to classify U S cities based on their economic function The system is designed to reflect an underlying hierarchy whereby consumers and businesses go to a city of a certain size for a certain function some functions are widely available and others are only available in the largest cities The system was developed for Rand McNally by geographer Richard L Forstall and released in 1964 The city rankings are updated periodically in the Rand McNally Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide an annual two volume set which is available in many libraries Among the criteria for categorization are retail sales newspaper circulation and the presence of universities and hospitals and corporate headquarters The size of the city s tributary area is critical to determining whether it will be rated a 2 3 or 4 As of 2006 there are 1492 cities rated The system consists of a number and a letter The number reflects a city s importance in the national hierarchy Nationally important business centers are ranked 1 Regional business centers are ranked 2 Significant local business centers are ranked 3 and business centers whose importance is purely local are ranked 4 the letter reflects its importance in its own area Doubled letters serve to distinguish centers within a class The most important center in a market trading area is given some kind of A Other business centers in the same market area will be given B or C depending on their importance For example Dallas is rated 1 AA a nationally important business center and Fort Worth is rated 2 BB B cities constitute basic trading centers while C cities do not Rand McNally divides the country into basic trading areas 487 as of 2008 each of which has exactly one A rated city The basic trading areas are aggregated into major trading areas of which there are 51 The Federal Communications Commission uses these areas for determining wireless territory boundaries 1 New York City has always been given the unique rating 1 AAAA due to its preeminent status in the national hierarchy Chicago was originally the only other city rated 1 AAA as having influence over a large area of the country In 1988 Los Angeles was similarly given a 1 AAA rating Thirteen cities are given the rating 1 AA as major national business centers Atlanta Boston Cleveland Dallas Detroit Houston Miami Minneapolis Philadelphia Pittsburgh St Louis San Francisco and Washington D C Ranally city rating Description Examples indicates a complete listing 1 AAAA Unique rating for New York New York City 1 AAA Unique rating for Chicago and Los Angeles Chicago Los Angeles 1 AA Major national business centers Atlanta Boston Cleveland Dallas Detroit Houston Miami Minneapolis Philadelphia Pittsburgh St Louis San Francisco and Washington D C 13 cities 1 A Other national business centers Baltimore Cincinnati Columbus Denver Indianapolis Kansas City Milwaukee New Orleans Oklahoma City Phoenix Portland San Antonio San Diego and Seattle 14 cities 2 AA Major regional business centers Albany Albuquerque Allentown Austin Baton Rouge Birmingham Buffalo Charlotte Columbia Dayton Des Moines El Paso Grand Rapids Harrisburg Hartford Honolulu Jackson Jacksonville Knoxville Las Vegas Lexington Little Rock Louisville Madison Memphis Nashville New Haven Norfolk Omaha Orlando Peoria Providence Raleigh Richmond Rochester NY Sacramento Salt Lake City Shreveport Spokane Springfield MA Syracuse Tampa Toledo Tucson Tulsa West Palm Beach Wichita and Youngstown 48 cities 2 BB Secondary major regional business centers Akron Fort Lauderdale Fort Worth Oakland St Paul St Petersburg San Jose Wilmington DE 8 cities 2 CC Same as 2 BB but not constituting a basic trading center Newark 2 A Other regional business centers Amarillo Anchorage Augusta GA Bakersfield Beaumont Canton Charleston SC Charleston WV Chattanooga Colorado Springs Corpus Christi Davenport Daytona Beach Erie Eugene Evansville Fayetteville NC Flint Fort Myers Fort Wayne Fresno Green Bay Greensboro Greenville SC Huntington WV Kalamazoo Lafayette LA Lancaster PA Lansing Lubbock McAllen Melbourne Mobile Modesto Montgomery Pensacola Portland ME Reading Reno Roanoke Rockford Saginaw Salem OR Sarasota Savannah Scranton South Bend Springfield IL Springfield MO Stockton Worcester 51 cities 2 B Secondary regional business centers Clearwater Newport News Tacoma Trenton Virginia Beach and Winston Salem 6 cities 2 C Same as 2 B but not constituting a basic trading center Ann Arbor Bridgeport Riverside and San Bernardino 4 cities 2 S Suburbs analogous to 2 C cities Anaheim Arlington Costa Mesa Dearborn Hialeah Hollywood FL Long Beach the largest city classified by Rand McNally as a suburb Mesa Paramus Pasadena Santa Ana Southfield MI Stamford Torrance Troy MI White Plains 16 suburbs 3 AA Major significant local business centers Abilene TX Albany GA Alexandria LA Altoona PA Appleton WI Asheville NC Atlantic City NJ Bangor ME Billings MT Biloxi MS Binghamton NY Bloomington IL Boise ID Brownsville TX Burlington VT Cedar Rapids IA Champaign IL Charlottesville VA Columbus GA Decatur IL Duluth MN Eau Claire WI Elmira NY Fargo ND Florence AL Fort Smith AR Gainesville FL Huntsville AL Jackson MI Johnstown PA Kingsport TN La Crosse WI Lafayette IN Lake Charles LA Lakeland FL Laredo TX Lawton OK Lima OH Lincoln NE Longview TX Lynchburg VA Macon GA Manchester NH Mansfield OH Medford OR Midland TX Monroe LA Muncie IN Muskegon MI New London CT Ocala FL Odessa TX Parkersburg WV Poughkeepsie NY Provo UT Pueblo CO Rochester MN St Joseph MO Salinas CA San Angelo TX Santa Barbara CA Sioux City IA Sioux Falls SD Tallahassee FL Terre Haute IN Texarkana TX Topeka KS Tuscaloosa AL Tyler TX Utica NY Visalia CA Waco TX Waterloo IA Wheeling WV Wichita Falls TX Wilmington NC Yakima WA and York PA 78 cities 3 BB Secondary major significant local business centers Durham NC Fall River MA Gastonia NC Hampton VA New Bedford MA Niagara Falls NY Monterey CA Ogden UT Pawtucket RI Schenectady NY Spartanburg SC Springfield OH Waterbury CT and Wilkes Barre PA 14 cities 3 CC Same as 3 BB but not constituting a basic trading center Boulder CO Everett WA Oxnard CA Racine WI Santa Rosa CA Ventura CA and Warwick RI 7 cities 3 SS Suburbs analogous to 3 CC cities Alexandria VA Arlington VA Aurora CO Aurora IL Bellevue WA Beverly Hills CA Bloomington MN Brockton MA Burlington MA Cambridge MA Cherry Hill NJ Concord CA Danbury CT Edina MN El Cajon CA Fairfax VA Framingham MA Fremont CA Fullerton CA Glendale CA Greensburg PA Hackensack NJ Hayward CA Huntington Beach CA Jersey City NJ Joliet IL Kansas City KS Lakewood CO Lawrence MA Livonia MI Lowell MA Mountain View CA Newport Beach CA Newton MA Norwalk CT Orange CA Overland Park KS Palo Alto CA Pomona CA Pontiac MI Rockville MD San Leandro CA San Mateo CA Schaumburg IL Scottsdale AZ Santa Monica CA Skokie IL Sterling Heights MI Vancouver WA Walnut Creek CA Warren MI Waukegan IL Wayne NJ Woodbridge NJ and Yonkers NY 55 suburbs 3 A Other significant local business centers Athens GA Anderson IN Cheyenne WY Fond du Lac WI Fort Pierce FL Grand Forks ND Hagerstown MD Redding CA 200 cities 3 B Secondary significant local business centers Meriden CT Fitchburg MA Johnson City TN Port Arthur TX 58 cities 3 C Same as 3 B but not constituting a basic trading center Ames IA Rock Hill SC Troy NY 51 cities 3 S Suburbs analogous to 3 C cities Arlington Heights IL Chula Vista CA Edison NJ Midwest City OK New Rochelle NY North Charleston SC Somerville MA Wyoming MI 180 suburbs 4 A Other local business centers Sierra Vista AZ Bemidji MN Kalispell MT Rolla MO 79 cities 4 B Secondary local business centers Cedar Falls IA Kearney NE Springdale AR Urbana IL 90 cities 4 C Same as 4 B but not constituting a basic trading center Carson City NV Conway AR DeKalb IL Dover NH Lodi CA 155 cities 4 S Suburbs analogous to 4 C cities Carrollton TX Compton CA Hillsboro OR Kirkland WA Mount Vernon NY West Haven CT 361 suburbs Notes The B and C cities are secondary because they are in the same market area as a city rated A While those are only abstract examples of the ratings consider how the system works in practice with the example of Ohio Rand McNally conceives of Ohio as consisting of nineteen markets trading areas with some peripheral counties being contained in trading areas of other states The table below shows the nineteen trading areas in order of hierarchy Each has an A rated city Some also have other rated cities and suburbs Example Ohio Trading area A rated city Other cities SuburbsCleveland Akron Cleveland 1 AA Akron 2 BB Wooster 3 C Elyria Euclid Lorain Mentor Middleburg Heights Parma all 3 S Barberton Beachwood Bedford Brooklyn Cleveland Heights Cuyahoga Falls Fairlawn Kent Lakewood Mayfield Heights Medina North Olmsted Painesville Ravenna Richmond Heights Willoughby all 4 S Cincinnati Cincinnati 1 A Hamilton 3 C Middletown 3 C Maysville KY 4 C Florence KY Springdale both 3 S Covington KY Fairfield Newport KY all 4 S Columbus Columbus 1 A Delaware Lancaster Newark all 3 C Mount Vernon 4 C Upper Arlington Whitehall both 4 S Dayton Springfield Dayton 2 AA Springfield 3 BB Bellefontaine Celina Greenville Piqua Troy all 4 C Trotwood Xenia both 4 S Toledo Toledo 2 AA Bowling Green Fremont both 4 C Maumee 4 S Youngstown Warren Youngstown 2 AA Warren 3 B Niles 3 S Canton New Philadelphia Canton 2 A New Philadelphia 3 B Dover 3 C Alliance 4 C Coshocton 4 C Massillon 4 C Lima Lima 3 AA Mansfield Mansfield 3 AA Ashland 4 C Ontario 4 S Ashtabula Ashtabula 3 A Chillicothe Chillicothe 3 A Findlay Tiffin Findlay 3 A Tiffin 4 B Marion Marion 3 A Portsmouth Portsmouth 3 A Sandusky Sandusky 3 A Steubenville Weirton Steubenville 3 A Weirton WV 4 B Zanesville Cambridge Zanesville 3 A Cambridge 4 B Athens Athens 4 A East Liverpool Salem East Liverpool 4 A Salem 4 B The system is applied by businesses seeking to serve a network of customers with the greatest efficiency For example a company that services elevators or a wholesaler of paper bags would want to locate its field representatives primarily in A rated cities The Rural Health Research Center at the University of Minnesota published a report in 2008 on access to physicians in rural areas which uses the system to evaluate access to physicians in rural areas 2 See also EditMetropolis Megalopolis city type Primate city Financial centre Ecumenopolis Global CityReferences EditRand McNally Commercial Atlas and Marketing Guide 136th edition 2005 Skokie Ill Rand McNally A complete description of the system is found at Volume 1 pp 7 8 and rosters of the ratings appear on pp 74 87 and 129 131 Richard L Forstall ed Rand McNally city rating guide a completely new concept in analyzing markets and planning sales and advertising programs in the 1090 principal business centers of the United States Chicago Rand McNally 1964 http wireless fcc gov auctions data maps mta pdf bare URL PDF Ira Moscovice et al Options for Increasing the Supply of Primary Care Physicians in Rural Minnesota Rural Health Research Center Division of Health Policy and Management School of Public Health University of Minnesota January 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2008 02 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ranally city rating system amp oldid 1168858798, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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