Ken, our neighbor had that dryer. Her GE washer had a full width white control panel with levers for hot or warm wash and Water Saver. The dial might have been sort of turquoise. Inside was GE's first design of the high speed dryer. The back of the drum was stationary and had a rectangular opening where the heat came in. The heating element was in a rectangular duct behind the drum. If you ran the dryer with the door open, there was no movement of air past the heater and a bright orange glow became visible in the opening in the back of the drum. There was a felt seal between the back of the drum and the drum itself and the drum ran on a bed of rollers underneath. I liked the timer knobs that year with the T shape and the chrome finish. While they might not have been the most ergonomically designed for comfort, you did not have to worry about wet fingers slipping off when you went to turn them like some of the smaller, more rounded chrome knobs they used later. The slightly more deluxe model of the dryer had a High/Low key next to the push to start.
There was an article about Gloria Swanson in Life, maybe, before she wrote her book on auto-lesbian relations titled Swanson on Swanson. (Not really.) Anyway, she became a strong advocate for health food and a vegetarian diet. There was a picture of her in her kitchen cutting up vegetables (hard to imagine a great star doing that) and visible in the photo is this washer, maybe with the Water Saver key. The picture might also be in the book; I will have to check. In the 60s, friends had a GE washer that was so BOL that it did not even have the Filter Flo feature. It was a perforated tub machine.
What a punim on that dryer(kvelling). It should be in pictures.
Nu, chachma, what was posting 134962 if it wasn't a picture with a little enhancement, just like big time? Such a talented one that mensch; helping everyone.
Thanks for the pictures.