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Word: bouchere (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Rangers won in the third-place playoff. Ching Johnson, big, bald, hooknosed, hip-swinging defense man of the Rangers, played with a grotesque aluminum protector strapped around his broken jaw. Frank Boucher, star centre, wore a cast of tape and bandage around ligaments he had torn away from his left collarbone shortly before the series. They came from behind in the third period of the deciding game with Ottawa, scored three times in three minutes, won at 5 to 2. Howie Morenz of the Canadiens, the fastest skater in hockey, his round, heavy shoulders hunched toward his stick, his strong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Stanley Cup | 4/14/1930 | See Source »

...lead. In the second period, however, the Harvard defense was unable to cope with the fierce attack and machine-like efficiency of their opponents, and St. John's totalled eight more points before the final whistle blew. ST. JOHN'S HARVARD Armacost, g. g., Dunn, Salmon Boucher, c.pt. c.pt., Robinson Lotz, pt. pt., Kroell, Pickard Morris, 1d. 1d., Henderson, Amazeen, Marshall McLean, 2d. 2d., Faude, Burke Jones, 3d. 3d., Park, Cleary, Briggs Ziegler, c. c. Nido, Farrell Andrew, Purdy, Hinds, 3a. 3a., Glenn, Bissell Cross, 2a. 2a., Pope, Hobbs Pool, Hoff, 1a. 1a., McGuire, Wilkinson, Foshay Sping, o.h. o.h., Foshay...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ST. JOHN'S LACROSSE TEAM DEFEATS CRIMSON, 12 TO 2 | 5/7/1929 | See Source »

Similarly the newly collected cuts from the "Dance of Death" by Hans Holbein. "The Death of the Virgin" by Rembrandt, and works by Abraham Bosse tell much about the manner of life of people in the seventeenth century. Prints by Boucher and Fragonnard, flower designs for wall-paper and textiles after Pillemont, and a reproduction of Hogarth's "Marriage a la Mede" are illustrative of the decorative arts in the eighteenth century...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Collections and Critiques | 4/25/1929 | See Source »

...expected the Rangers to win; they were facing many handicaps. Light and fast, they had to play the toughest, heaviest team in hockey, the Maroons of Montreal. It was hard to see how flashy skaters like Frank Boucher, Ranger centre, or Bill Cook and his brother Bun, the wings, could stand being bumped around by checks like Siebert, Button, Smith. The Rangers were playing all their games away from home. In the second game their goalie's eye was cut open and Lester Patrick, manager and coach, a star defense man 20 years ago, put on the pads...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Rangers v. Maroons | 4/23/1928 | See Source »

...disallowed a Montreal goal, the crowd threw overcoats, hats, papers, garbage, and bottles on the ice-in which Miller whirled his arms and legs like the sails of a mill, threw himself backward and forward, stopped every shot except one-a game in which 21 penalties were given, Frank Boucher stabbed twice through the Maroon defense. No team representing an American city has won an important hockey trophy since Seattle took the Stanley Cup title in 1917. All the players on the Rangers are Canadians...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Rangers v. Maroons | 4/23/1928 | See Source »

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