Word: mille
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...parade to the IAB will start at 7 p.m., at the Union, and will proceed down Plympton and Mill Sts. to Holyoke St. At the IAB, Coach Lloyd Jordan will give a short talk, and introduce Captain Bill Meigs...
...band, cheerleaders, and University police will lead a pre-Princeton game parade from the Union to the I.A.B. The paraders will leave the freshman center at 7 p.m., wind through the Yard, out the Widener Gate, and down Plympton St. to Mill St. The march will continue on Mill to Holyoke and up Holyoke to the I.A.B...
Canadian newsprint producers argued that they have had to earmark a high percentage of profits for costly mill expansion to add 900,000 tons to Canada's annual capacity, as well as pay out 15% wage increases in the three years and three months since the last price hike. Even though St. Lawrence profits for the first half of 1955 were 37.3% ahead of the 1954 level, President P. M. Fox said: "We have gone beyond [our] ability to absorb increasing costs." At week's end the Justice Department, which has no jurisdiction over Canadian producers, asked...
Streets like Mill Plympton, Bow and Mt. Auburn, formerly lined with cars from one end of the street tot the other, were practically deserted at 4 a.m. yesterday. But simultaneously with the scarcity of cars on these streets, there was a rise in the numbers parked north of the Yard. Cambridge Street was lined with cars, as were side streets between Cambridge and Kirkland Streets...
...high to reach. He had to carry a looped handkerchief on his elbow on which she could rest her hand, after the manner of a carriage strap." Author Woodbury, a onetime anthropologist and a ninth-generation descendant of William Goffe, is the present proprietor of the family mill. He has tied his odd bag of characters together with historical facts, New England folkways and early Americana. John Goffe's Legacy crackles with wit, adds a few asterisks to history, and makes the reader wonder how New England ever acquired a reputation for being stolid and conservative...