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Word: ohio (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...example, in Nebraska, Reagan was ahead two months ago; but the latest Omaha World-Herald poll showed Ford in front, 53% to 29%. The President is expected to win most of the delegates in New York and Pennsylvania, in addition to Michigan (May 18) and New Jersey and Ohio (June...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PRIMARIES: The Ford Bandwagon Rolls | 3/22/1976 | See Source »

...EARLY MORNING hours of December 31, 1969, a blue 1966 Chevrolet with Ohio plates pulled up beside Joseph A. (Jock) Yablonski's Clarksville, Pennsylvania, home. Three men got out and entered the house. The three went silently to the third floor bedrooms where they shot and killed Yablonski, his wife Margaret, and his daughter Charlotte as they slept. The bodies lay there until January 5, when they were discovered by Yablonski's son Kenneth...

Author: By Joe Dalton, | Title: The Yablonski Legacy | 3/20/1976 | See Source »

Pass could not have picked a more inept crew of murderers. Gilly, Huddleston's son-in-law, had a third grade education. A Cleveland, Ohio house painter, he also ran a low-life restaurant which was a gathering place for burglars trying to fence stolen goods. It was from among these burglars he recruited the killers. Apparently the cash involved was not important; he thought if he killed Yablonski, his wife Annette would love him more...

Author: By Joe Dalton, | Title: The Yablonski Legacy | 3/20/1976 | See Source »

...outcome), Ford declared he was "delighted" by his first election victory of any kind outside Grand Rapids. A reporter asked him, "Was it like beating Michigan State?" The old Big Ten center laughed and in football lingo indicated that it was much bigger and better: "Oh no, like beating Ohio State...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CAMPAIGN: On to the Showdown in Florida | 3/8/1976 | See Source »

...Shame. State Department officials were angered by some of Nixon's foreign policy pronouncements. Ohio's Democratic Congressman Wayne Hays claimed that Nixon had gone to China "to hurt President Ford in New Hampshire." Syndicated Columnist David Broder angrily forswore a promise made to himself not to write another word about Richard Nixon. "There is nothing, absolutely nothing, he will not do in order to salvage for himself whatever scrap of significance he can find in the shambles of his life," wrote the normally even-tempered Broder. "Nothing shames him." The harshest attack came from Goldwater, who claimed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE EX-PRESIDENT: Nixon's Embarrassing Road Show | 3/8/1976 | See Source »

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