Word: rayed
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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India's Ambassador to the U.S. Siddarth Shankar Ray highlighted the achievements and difficulties of his country's economic liberalization program in a speech at the Kennedy School yesterday...
...headed for his third fund-raising meeting of the day. The former Tennessee Governor got up before dawn that morning in New Hampshire, flew to Nashville and then addressed his 40 top local financiers at a genteel Governor's-mansion lunch. He later huddled with country-music star Ray Stevens (A-hab the A-rab) to plan the entertainment for a $2 million fund-raising dinner this Monday and then dashed to a small arm-twisting reception on Nashville's storied southwest side around dusk...
...exhibit is an excellent opportunity for both photography connoisseurs and neophytes to introduce themselves to the wealth of the Harvard Museums' photography collections. The collection includes great works by Ansel Adams, Ben Shahn, Alfred Stieglitz and Man Ray. Curator Deborah M. Kao gives newcomers a lucid presentation of the broad strokes of photographic development...
...Ray's solarized images are a representation of the first significant shift of photography in the early 20th century. Solarization, where a photograph is re-exposed to light during the developing process, allowed photography to be carried away by the whim of chance and accident. The dramatic shifts of lights and darks force a confrontation with form rather than surface...
COPENHAGEN: To Smoke or Not to . . . An aggressive antismoking campaign in Sweden is raising angry smoke signals in Denmark because it targets Prince cigarettes, a popular Danish brand. The posters now confronting smokers throughout Sweden feature shocking images--an anxious-looking woman flanked by an X ray of a cancer-stricken woman with only one lung--and even stronger headlines: Seduced by a Prince and Killed by a Prince. Though the manufacturer of Prince cigarettes is not taking legal action, offended Danes are fighting back. ``Since thousands of people are killed in traffic every year,'' the Copenhagen tabloid Ekstra Bladet...