Word: experts
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Lynch was one of Boston's best amateur puck-stoppers and this position naturally gave him a detached view of the game that was bound to make him a student of the ice sport. Though still an undergraduate, the rotund Hearst man is already the Boston American's hockey expert and as such he "does", besides his Harvard sports, all the professional hockey games in Boston. His prowess as a hockey referee makes him one of the most sought-after of ice officials so that, though still in the cub stage, he has referred some 125 games...
...these two careers are taken into consideration, it is natural that Mr. Ryan should be an expert writer on football and sports in general. He has, besides, a manner that makes it hard, evidently, to refuse him news. It would not be kind, or perhaps even safe, to tell Mr. Ryan that there is "nothing for publication...
...named by an English author some time ago the unfulfilled obligations of medical science were two in number: to discover a remedy for cancer and to learn how to grow hair. While progress toward the first of these objectives has been slow, a beauty expert of New York has already achieved the second. The fruit of eighteen years study is a process revealed on Wednesday by which he can anchor any number of hairs to the scalp by means of tiny gold springs...
...largely waterpower, paper and cement activities-and to assist the stabilization of foreign currencies, U. S. bankers loaned to Europe and the Far East $1,318,700,000 for the ten months ending Oct. 31-more than was negotiated for the entire year of 1926. Wendell E. Thorne, financial expert of the Department of Commerce, who announced the total in Washington last week, forecasted that at the conclusion of this year U. S. loans abroad would aggregate $12,500,000,000. To Whom. To Germany was advanced $262,135,000-more than half of the $508,000,000 pocketed...
...after winning the Fisk Prize for poetry, she published her verses, Under the Tree, but not until she published a year ago The Time of Man, a novel dealing with the country people of the south, did critics realize her as an important and highly individual expert novice in U. S. letters...