Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Zephyr cloth is a thin kind of cassimere made in Belgium.
"It's positive," said Professor Cassimere, who is black.
Due to scarce supplies, they were made of jeans (a mixture of wool and cotton) or satinette and cassimere.
Alberdure loves Hyanthe, the daughter of Lord Cassimere; but the banquet arrives and Cornelia does as commanded.
The doctors' full-dress gown is a scarlet cassimere gown (brocaded white satin for DMus) gathered at the yoke and with bell sleeves.
"People don't come here to gamble," said Raphael Cassimere Jr., a history professor at the University of New Orleans who is an expert on the city's past.
Raphael Cassimere, a history professsor at the University of New Orleans, which is near Southern University, said today that he had long advocated the single-board concept.
From the 16th century Devizes became known for its textiles, initially white woollen broadcloth but later the manufacture of serge, drugget, felt and cassimere or Zephyr cloth.
People who choose to buy their dress may opt for finer fabrics, such as princetta, poplin, grosgrain, Percale, cotton, wool, cassimere, broadcloth, bengaline, Russell cord or corded/ribbed material.
Doctors wear full-shape hoods with semi-circular bases, made of scarlet cassimere (except DMus and DSc which are made of brocaded white satin and palatinate silk respectively).
The fabric used in these jackets, ranged from the finer kerseys and broadcloths used early in the war, to the cotton/wool blends of jeans, satinette, and cassimere, to name several examples.
Much of the credit goes to Raphael Cassimere, Jr., Youth Council President from 1960-66, and Llewelyn J. Soniat who served as Youth Advisor for a quarter-century.
DBA (Doctor of Business Administration) Not made of cassimere but rather wool panama, lined with white silk and bound on all edges with palatinate purple silk one inch wide.
'Political Anachronism' Dr. Cassimere and others who favor mergers signed a statement that said, "Louisiana's racially dual system of higher education is an economic disaster, a political anachronism, a social millstone and a pedagogical abomination."
"You can't argue on the one hand that the University of Mississippi ought to be desegregated but Jackson State ought to be black," said Professor Cassimere, who is one of the few blacks arguing for a merger.
One educator who rejects the nurturing-role argument is Raphael Cassimere Jr., a professor of history at the University of New Orleans, a mostly white school less than a mile from the mostly black Southern University campus at New Orleans.
Appearances by Louisiana Supreme Court Justice Bernette Johnson, Tulane University professor Lawrence N. Powell, University of New Orleans professor Raphael Cassimere and historian and author Keith Weldon Medley took place as scheduled.