Ohm's Law:
The pyramid is "V" on top, with "I" and "R" on the bottom. It can be expressed as three complimentary equations:
1) Voltage = Current * Resistance.
2) Current = Voltage / Resistance.
3) Resistance = Voltage / Current.
Any time you have two of the factors from one side of the equation, you will know the third factor (the other side). In your question "calculate the current in a 140-w electric blanket connected to a 120-v outlet"[/color], you have Watts and voltage.
Now you need to figure out what the "Watts" means. Watts is volts*amps. Again, you can draw a pyramid to help remember it all. Put Watts at the top, and across the bottom you have volts and amps (amps being current). Again, this allows three expressions:
1) Watts = Voltage * Current.
2) Current = Watts / Voltage.
3) Voltage = Watts / Current.
Now, Watts is voltage*amps. Since you know the Watts and voltage, you can divide Watts by voltage to get current. 140/120 = 1.15 Amps, roughly.
Now you have two factors necessary for working with Ohm's Law. You have the voltage (120) and the current (1.15).
The short version:
Watts = voltage*amps.
You've got voltage and watts: watts (140) = volts (120) * ?.
So, by re-arranging the factors you can get: ? = watts (140) / voltage (120).
Simply fill in the "?".