Word: richmond
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Died. Harry Whinna Nice, 63, fat, affable, one-eyed Baltimore criminal lawyer who was Maryland's Governor from 1935 to 1939; after a heart attack; in Richmond...
Albert C. Kelly, Robert A. Koch, Edward H. Mahoney, Wallace McDonald, Joseph B. McGrath, Robert F. McGivern, Austin B. Mason, Jr., Richmond D. Moot, J. Robert Moskin, John F. Otto, Jr., George A. Saxton, Richard Sorlien, William R. Snow, Edwin J. Sommer, Jr., Norman S. Stearns, Andrew W. Welch, Jr., and Andrew D. Wolfe...
...pounded on the flag when it was draped over the chairman's table at a strike meeting. ¶ In Chicago, a strike at the International Harvester Tractor Works threatened to spread to the huge McCormick Works next door. Struck were the Harvester Rock Falls, III. and Richmond, Ind. plants. Argument: higher wages. ¶ In Bridgeville, Pa., 400 workers who struck without authorization from their parent union were fired from their jobs at the Vanadium Corp. plant. Closed by another strike was the company's Niagara Falls plant...
Albert C. Kelly, Robert A. Koch, Wallace McDonald, Edward H. Mahoney, Austin B. Mason, Jr., Richmond D. Moot, J. Robert Moskin, John F. Otto, Jr., George A. Saxton, Richard Sorlien, William R. Snow, Norman S. Stearns, Edwin J. Sommer, Jr., Andrew W. Welch, Jr., and Andrew D. Wolfe...
...Griffith,* from a story he wrote with Virginia Van Upp, Virginia was filmed on the spot, in torrid, somnolent Albemarle County, where Thomas Jefferson lived and died. In spite of the labored accents of its non-Confederate cast (only Southern actor featured in Virginia is Tom Rutherford, a Richmond blue blood) its lines have an authentic ring, might have been copied down verbatim from the resentful speeches of Albemarle's land-loving inhabitants...