Word: raymonde
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...first half of the season, injuries benched two promising harriers, Doug Raymond and Woody Smith, while inexperience plagued the rest of the team. While they had all raced before, none of the freshman runners had had any substantial cross-country experience. By mid-season, however, they had enough experience to trounce Columbia, 20-41, and to push a strong Penn team before losing, 29-27. From then on, the Crimson gathered momentum. They faltered before Princeton, but ran up victories over Dartmouth, Yale, and the G.B.L. contenders...
...company began 65 years ago as an amalgamation of regional cracker bakers, quickly dominated the industry by taking the cracker out of the barrel and putting it into a box as the original Uneeda Biscuit. Nabisco now sells its 139 kinds of cookies and crackers in 307 different packages. Raymond Loewy designs them, and they are carefully test-marketed to gauge the lure of their colors, shapes and such gimmicks as "reclosable linings...
...RAYMOND PARKER-Kootz, 655 Madison Ave. at 60th St. A thunderhead of hard-edged clouds in shocking colors, Parker's shapes-in-space seem waiting to collide, never quite make a satisfactory bump. Through...
Dozens of top companies have had a hand in building the Nimba facilities. The U.S.'s Raymond International Inc. laid the 167-mile railroad from Nimba to Buchanan and built a seaport there from breakwater up. The Netherlands' Phillips installed an electronic rail-traffic control system; Krupp made the ore-handling equipment. Aided by a maze of conveyor belts and closed-circuit TV control panels, LAMCO can load ore into a ship in less than nine hours after it has been mined. At the foot of Mount Nimba has grown up Liberia's third largest community, where...
...public debate, and make it, like any other public health question, the concern of the municipal health authorities. By an act of the legislature in May, 1962, Massachusetts became one of the three states--the others are Maine and Nebrasks--that require referenda to begin or end fluoridation. Mrs. Raymond A. Bauer, chairman of the leading profluoridation group, says that no action has yet been taken to change the law. Unless it is amended, however, there will undoubtedly be a fourth fluoridation vote in 1965, and probably others at irregular intervals thereafter...