Word: lakewood
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...friends over and said she had to have sex with them too. She didn't want to, but she figured maybe this is what you have to do to be popular in high school." So the girl submitted, recalls Cowger, 17, a peer counselor at the high school in Lakewood, California. She sympathized with the younger girl's dilemma: "These were the popular guys...
...does it help that in subtle ways -- a look across the grocery aisle, a comment at the nursery school -- the two kinds of moms exacerbate each other's guilt. Debbie Ippolito of Lakewood, N.J., seethes whenever a working mother makes a comment about all the "free time" she has. "People think you're eating bonbons all day," she rails. "I had a baby, not a lobotomy!" Heightening the rivalry, some of those who gave up the fast track pursue full- time parenting with a competitive drive honed in the business world. "It's not O.K. to just have an average...
Talk about coals to Newcastle. By January, Lakewood Industries of Hibbing, Minn., plans to be exporting chopsticks to, of all places, Japan. The new company will produce the sticks from the area's abundant aspen trees. Projected first-year revenues: up to $8 million. Lakewood has presold its first five years of production to three Japanese restaurant suppliers, who have been unable to obtain enough sticks from Asian manufacturers. Japan's demand for the disposable chopsticks is nearly insatiable: 20 billion pairs a year...
Hibbing, a community of 20,000 that is probably best known as Bob Dylan's hometown, has been hurt by the decline of the region's taconite mining. The town gave Lakewood, which is creating 95 jobs, a site in a new industrial park, despite fears that the Japanese would never accept American-made chopsticks. But Hibbing's mayor Dick Nordvold predicts that if chopstick sales falter, Lakewood can make Popsicle sticks and tongue depressors...
...well as two summer camps in New Jersey. After graduating from N.Y.U. at 18, Larry earned a master's degree in industrial engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. In 1946, after his brief stay at Harvard Law School, Larry and Bob persuaded their father to help them buy a Lakewood, N.J., resort hotel called Laurel-in- the-Pines, which proved to be a potent moneymaker...