Word: edwin
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Hugh Moore Paper cup, 1908 Jacques Brandenberger Cellophane, 1908 Arthur Wynne Crossword puzzle, 1913 Joseph Block Whistling kettle, 1921 Andrew Olsen Pop-up tissue box, 1921 George Squier Muzak, 1922 Garrett A. Morgan Traffic light, 1923 Francis W. Davis Power steering, 1926 R. Stanton Avery Self-adhesive label, 1935 Edwin L. Peterson Answering machine, 1945 Earl John Hilton Credit card, 1950 Clinton Riggs Yield sign, 1950 Chavannes & Fielding Bubble wrap, 1957 Luther Simjian ATM, 1960 Herb Peterson Egg McMuffin...
...Murphy Justin G. Muzinich Elie Y. Mystal Jesse I. Needleman Maria C. Nelson Seth P. Nickinson Mary W. Nicklin Jessica A. Niles Paul K. Nitze Gregory S. Novak Deirdre A. O'Dwyer Kathleen M. O'Toole Elizabeth C. Oelsner Dara B. Olmstead Noah D. Oppenheim Matthew T. Ozug Edwin T. Pankau Irwin G. Park Michael S. Passaportis Jonathan M. Patton Tamin M. Pechet Maura M Pelham Joshua E. Penzner Richard A. Perez Joshua A. Perry Danilo Petranovich Mei Pin Phua Lindsay J. Pindyck Giselle J. Pinto Nicholas J. Pinto Peter D. Platt Luke C. Platzer Rachel W. Podolsky...
...jobs. "She loves her children, and I know she's trying," says Pearson, 28, a former Peace Corps worker. Anita, 29, has six children, but Yoralis is 9 and Jessica 8, and the nursery takes kids 6 and under only. So Anita brought in Yoel, 4; Vicente, 3; Edwin, 2; and Romeo...
...play takes ten years and three writers to make it to the stage, you can bet that it shouldn't have made it there at all. But such ominous artistic omens didn't prevent Producing Director Peter Altman of the Huntington Theatre Company from adapting Nobel-prize winning author Edwin O'Connor's 1956 novel, The Last Hurrah, into a theatrical event. Speckled with scheming politicos, snooty aristocrats and down-to-earth Irish-American folk, O'Connor's novel, a sweeping panorama of '50s Boston political scene, seemed a perfect recipe for dramatic success, right? Wrong...
...technology themselves. For his '60s-era peers, high tech meant the cold, gray establishment that they were revolting against. Jobs knew better. "Leonardo da Vinci was a great artist and a great scientist," he says. "Michelangelo knew how to cut stone at the quarry. Edwin Land at Polaroid once said, 'I want Polaroid to stand at the intersection of art and science,' and I've never forgotten that...