Word: ohio
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Your article on the American artist Charles Burchfield [June 15] was of great interest to me, as I am a native Salemite (Ohio) and knew the Burchfield family...
WRINGER WASHING MACHINES. More than 100,000 people are injured by such wringers each year. Not long ago, for example, a mother in Columbus, Ohio, found her three-year-old daughter strangled by a wringer. The industry has finally begun to install a device that releases the rollers when there is a tug in the opposite direction. Millions of older washers have no such equipment...
...work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, David Ernst, 26, will get his Ph.D. in August and emerge as one of the best-trained young physicists in America. Unfortunately, that may not be enough to assure him job security in his field. When Ernst recently sought a post at Ohio's Heidelberg College, which was looking for a physics teacher to enlarge its four-man department, he might have expected little trouble in landing it. But this year, despite his impeccable credentials, Heidelberg turned him down. There were 361 inquiries about...
CLEVELAND, OHIO sprawls comfortably just south of polluted Lake Erie. The city does not appear crowded. The expensive Tudor mansions along Fairmont Boulevard give way gradually to the apartments in Shaker Heights, which in turn, lead to the ghetto. Hugh Calkins '45 is from Cleveland. Kent State is 50 miles away...
...gathering of two clans. The Sheraton-Cleveland is a large, expensive hotel. Its lobby is not much different from the lobbies of the other hotels in this county where rich people stay. This particular night, the Grand Ballroom was being rented by the Cuyahoga-Lake Division of the Ohio Republican Finance Committee. The purpose was a $250-a-plate dinner to raise money for the Republicans. The featured speaker was the Vice-President of the United States...