Word: rays
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...RAY D. ULREY Los Angeles, Calif...
...Owen (A) 6-0, 6-2; Richard Inglis Jr. '33 defeated E. O. Merchant (A) 6-1, 6-2; G. H. Hartford '34 defeated R. S. Clifton (A) 2-6, 8-6, 6-4; W. E. Arensberg '33 defeated P. B. Lyster (A) 6-3, 6-3; J. F. Ray '34 defeated S. C. Limerick (A) 6-0, 7-5; and F. W. Jones, Jr. '35 defeated J. A. Shields...
Author of the new feature is Ray Gross, 38, a dark, dome-browed man who worked five years for Goodyear-Zeppelin Corp. and who has been inventing things for 18 years. When he managed a chain of clothing stores he got the idea for the pants-presser. While working for Goodyear, he says, he actually landed a blimp by means of a harpoon-anchor like the one which he depicts in his cartoon series. Two of his inventions are now in production: a coathanger with attached compartment to hold mothballs or perfume; a truck tailgate which lowers to receive freight...
Special x-ray procedure, in which air is placed in the subdural space, will disclose such attachments and consequent stretching of the brain. In epileptics these unnatural attachments usually occur at the top of the skull. Dr. Ney cuts out the special section of bone, replaces the bone with a thick celluloid which the du Pouts make for him. The celluloid plate lowers the dome of the skull, prevents brain attachments, consequently prevents brain stretching. The operation is a plastic one. The scalp grows over the celluloid skull insert, which does not fracture, gives perfect brain protection...
This winter smart Londoners danced to "What More Can I Ask?", a Ray Noble tune even smoother and more insinuating than the overworked "Goodnight, Sweetheart." Ray Noble and his orchestra have made a record of it, letting fiddles and saxophones carry the melody against an elaborate syncopation. Leslie Hutchinson, a Negro whose records are a rage in London, sings the same song to his own free & easy piano accompaniment...