Word: ind
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...professor of History of Science at New Mexico State University; Catherine Z. Elgin, unaffiliated, who will study Philosophy; Michael T. Ferejohn, assistant professor of English at Washington State University; Thomas L. Jeffers, assistant professor of English at Cornell University; Edward Kadletz, assistant professor of Classics at Ball State University (Ind.); Kent Kraft, assistant professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Georgia; Elaine T. May, assistant professor of History of American Civilization at the University of Minnesota; Heather McClave, assistant professor of English at the College; Dian Murray, assistant professor of History and East Asian Languages at Linfield College...
...Despos, 39, the son of a Greek immigrant tailor, is the embodiment of the American success story. He learned to cut and sew at his father's knee, and five years ago he opened his own tailoring shop on one of the busiest crosstown streets in Fort Wayne, Ind. He quickly discovered that there was a bonanza in alterations. Says he: "People had lapels on old suits altered for $35 each instead of paying thousands for a new wardrobe." The first year his shop was open, Despos did $95,000 worth of business. Today he employs his father...
...anthology of short stories by writers like Joseph Conrad, John Steinbeck and William Faulkner. Said the school superintendent Slater: "I don't regret it one bit, and we'd do it again. I'm just sorry about all the publicity that we got." In Warsaw, Ind., a gaggle of citizens in 1977 publicly burned 40 copies of Values Clarifications, a textbook, as a show of support for a school board that decided to ban both written matter and independent-minded teachers from its system. Said William I. Chapel, a member of that board: "The bottom line...
Bloomington, Ind...
...majority of congressmen attending the Institute are Republicans. "Republicans today are better able to formulate policy that will represent the nation," Rep. John Hiller (R-Ind.) said. He added that if President-elect Reagan has "any luck at all" in economic policies and if the Republicans gain strength in the House, "Republicans could be in control for the next ten, 15 to 20 years...