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...another character whose looks are deceiving is Gerry (Erik Lindseth), the father of Christina's illegitimate child. He seems the archetypal happy-go-lucky loafer. He can never get his act together: he flirts with everyone and commits himself to no one; he's had more professions than most people have hot breakfasts, and claims to be an expert on everything when he actually knows little of anything. But Lindseth depicts a Gerry whose guileless, good-for-nothing layabout image conceals a calculating cold-heartedness...

Author: By Edward P. Mcbride, | Title: Friel Entrancing With Po-Mo Dancing | 11/3/1994 | See Source »

...opposition is using student money for a perk which is entirely unnecessary," says second-year law student Erik A. Lindseth, who is the Council's parliamentarian. "There's a certain financial stake...

Author: By Evan J. Eason, | Title: BEER, MONSTER TRUCKS, AND THE HARVARD LAW SCHOOL COUNCIL | 10/2/1993 | See Source »

...just don't hear of deliberative assemblies with beer at their sessions," Lindseth says. "If there's just a bunch of Long Necks being tipped up the whole meeting, then the debate suffers...

Author: By Evan J. Eason, | Title: BEER, MONSTER TRUCKS, AND THE HARVARD LAW SCHOOL COUNCIL | 10/2/1993 | See Source »

What may well be happening, says El mer L. Lindseth, chairman of the Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., is that "we're experiencing significant changes in components of our gross national product." The new industries on the rise, such as electronics and missiles, use comparatively little steel; thus some experts feel that the index statisticians lay too much emphasis on the steel industry. Some transistors, for example, smaller than a kernel of corn, sell for $200 to $300, or more than a ton of steel. And there is a shift in industries themselves. In Los Angeles, where aircraft-industry employment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: STATE OF BUSINESS: The Next Six Months | 7/11/1960 | See Source »

Pooled Strength. The postwar growth has been phenomenal. Where utility men once waited for new demand before expanding, they now gear expansion to projections of the growth of their area-and step out to anticipate it. Since 1945, thanks largely to President Elmer Lindseth's program to lure new industry to his area, Cleveland Electric Illuminating's power sales have jumped 92%; Philadelphia Electric, a sparkplug in the industrialization of the Delaware Valley (TIME, June 8), has spent $320 million to supply 227,000 new customers; Detroit Edison, under President Walker Cisler, has doubled its investment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UTILITIES: Commutation | 8/31/1953 | See Source »

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