Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Natalia Fedner (1983– ), fashion designer, raised in Columbus, Ohio; Shawn Foster (1973– ), music video, film and television director; Alex Grey (1953– ), psychedelic artist; born in Columbus and attended Columbus College of Art and Design; Janet Cook Lewis (1855–1947), painter, librarian and bookbinder
As of the census [3] of 2000, there were 1,288 people, 518 households, and 361 families living in the village. The population density was 756.3 inhabitants per square mile (292.0/km 2).
The Columbus Citizen-Journal was a daily morning newspaper in Columbus, Ohio published by the Scripps Howard company. It was formed in 1959 by the merger of The Columbus Citizen and The Ohio State Journal. It shared printing facilities, as well as business, advertising, and circulation staff in a joint operating agreement with The Columbus ...
Columbus, Ohio: Chas. Scott's Steam Press. 1848. hdl:2027/uc1.b3831116. Acts of a Local Nature Passed by the Forty-Eighth General Assembly of the State of Ohio, Begun and Held in the City of Columbus December 3, 1849 and in the Forty-Eighth Year of Said State. Volume XLVIII. Columbus, Ohio: Scott& Bascom. 1850. hdl:2027/osu.32437011486079.
Salmon P. Chase (Ohio governor, abolitionist, U.S.Treasury Secretary and Chief Justice) (Cincinnati) Gary Cohn (National Economic Council Director) (Shaker Heights) James M. Cox (governor, presidential candidate, media mogul) (Dayton) Ephraim Cutler (a framer of Ohio Constitution, abolitionist, longtime Ohio University Trustee (Ames Twp)
Old Jeffersonville Historic District NRHP Nomination Form. Kleber, John E. (2001). Encyclopedia of Louisville. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2100-0. Kramer, Carl (2007). This Place We Call Home. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-34850-1.
Catherine Joséphine "Katia" Krafft (née Conrad; 17 April 1942 – 3 June 1991) and her husband, Maurice Paul Krafft (25 March 1946 – 3 June 1991) were French volcanologists and filmmakers who died in a pyroclastic flow on Mount Unzen, Nagasaki, Japan, on 3 June 1991.
Mourners gather at the Supreme Court after the announcement of Ruth Bader Ginsburg's death Courtroom with Ginsburg's seat draped in black, the day after her death. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, died from complications of metastatic pancreatic cancer on September 18, 2020, at the age of 87.