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Word: cocas (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Coca-Cola may have Mello Yello, but South House has the Orange Crush. The SoHo hordes controlled the line of scrimmage throughout the second game of yesterday's House football doubleheader, limiting Dunster-Mather to four first downs while rushing for more than five yards per carry on offense en route to a 12-0 victory over the Dunsters yesterday afternoon at Soldiers Field...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: South and Eliot Post Shutouts | 10/24/1980 | See Source »

...heroin is cheaper (about $50 to $70 for 20 grains) and stronger (up to 20% pure) than the brown Mexican heroin that it is rapidly replacing at street-corner markets. While cocaine, which comes primarily from South American coca leaves, gives the user an instant rush that lasts from three to six hours, the effects of heroin, a morphine derivative, are stronger and last for up to ten hours. Last week Manhattan District Attorney Robert Morgenthau warned a conference of the National Association of Citizens Crime Commissions that because the new heroin is so easily available, the East Coast...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: A New and Deadly Menace | 10/6/1980 | See Source »

...Bryant returned to his alma mater, which had floundered through four dismal seasons. Before the Auburn game that year, he told the Touchdown Club in Birmingham: "Gentlemen, I wouldn't bet anything but Coca-Cola on tomorrow's game. Next year you can bet a fifth of whisky. And the year after that you can mortgage the damn house." Bryant was right. A bettor would have lost a Coke that first year (Auburn won, 14-8), but the mortgages were safe: Alabama took the next four games in the series without allowing a point...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Football's Supercoach | 9/29/1980 | See Source »

...late May the company's 15 directors were summoned by Austin to a special meeting. There they elected a new president: Roberto C. Goizueta, 48, a Cuban-born and Yale-educated chemical engineer who has worked for the company, mainly in technical and administrative jobs, since 1954. Most Coca-Cola watchers assumed that it would be a while before he would be declared the successor of Austin. At 65, Austin had been Coke's chief for 14 years and had already had his retirement postponed for a year, evidently to allow time to groom a successor. But last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A Turn at Coke | 8/18/1980 | See Source »

...architect, Goizueta started out as a chemist in Coca-Cola's Havana bottling plant; Fidel Castro's 1959 takeover drove him to a job with Coke in the Bahamas. In 1964 he went to the U.S. and began making his way up the company's managerial ranks. Among the tasks he will face in his new job are strengthening the somewhat strained relations Coke has with some of its 550 domestic bottlers and boosting the company's domestic earnings, which now account for only a third of overall profits. "I don't expect anything dramatic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: A Turn at Coke | 8/18/1980 | See Source »

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