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Baldridge joined WHIO-TV in 1972 as a general assignment reporter. In 1977 Baldridge began anchoring with Dayton broadcast legend Don Wayne, whom he had grown up watching. He later worked alongside Cheryl McHenry and Letitia Perry. During his years at WHIO Jim Baldridge traveled the world to cover stories important to the Dayton area.
In 1971, WKEF management began looking for a gimmick to garner ratings on Saturday nights. When Hobart suggested a late-night horror movie show, station management accepted the idea; encouraged by colleagues, Hobart himself auditioned for the hosting job by donning a monk's robe, fangs and skull-like make-up, initially calling himself "Dr. Death".
Helen Flanders Dunbar (1902–1959) — important early figure in U.S. psychosomatic medicine; Galen (129–c. 210) — Roman physician and anatomist; Paul Ehrlich (1854–1915) — German scientist; won the 1908 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine; developed Ehrlich's reagent; Christiaan Eijkman (1858–1930) — pathologist, studied beriberi
Burt was born in Dayton, Ohio, and earned his M.D. from the University of Rochester School of Medicine in 1945. He was licensed in Ohio in 1951. Burt began performing "love surgery" in 1966. [4] In his 1975 book, Surgery of Love, Burt wrote: "Women are structurally inadequate for intercourse. This is a pathological condition amenable by surgery."
WHIO-TV (channel 7) is a television station in Dayton, Ohio, United States, affiliated with CBS. It has been owned by Cox Media Group since its inception, making it one of two stations that have been built and signed on by Cox (alongside company flagship WSB-TV in Atlanta). WHIO-TV's transmitter is located off Germantown Street in the Highview ...
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James H. McGee (1918–2006), former mayor of Dayton; C. J. McLin (1921–1988), former Ohio State Representative; Rhine McLin (born 1948), former mayor of Dayton, former Ohio State Representative, former Ohio Senator; Jeffrey J. Mims Jr. (born 1947), mayor of Dayton; Vipal J. Patel, (born 1967 or 1968), acting US Attorney for the Southern ...
The Dayton Heart and Vascular Hospital was owned by Good Samaritan Hospital and was located on the hospital's main campus. On January 17, 2018, it was announced Good Samaritan Hospital would close by the end of the year. [6] The final patients were discharged on July 20, 2018. and the hospital officially closed on July 23, 2018. [7]