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Word: experts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...State, War & Navy building. Acting Secretary of State Cotton was just down the corridor and around the corner. The President's door was open to him at any hour with despatches from Chief Delegate Stimson at St. James's palace. Downstairs in the cable room were expert telegraphers. Code clerks filled the code room from which all snoopers were shooed away. Tall, curly-haired Pierre De Lagorde Boal of Boalsburg, Pa., chief of the department's conference secretariat, sat in his office like a traffic officer directing the two-way flow of messages. In the office labeled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Cables, Codes, Mimeographs | 2/3/1930 | See Source »

...alliance with the Republican National Committee during the 1928 campaign. It spent $40,000 to help elect Herbert Hoover, but failed to report its political expenditures. Its officers reached into Congress and hired two U. S. employes as "Washington correspondents." They were Edward Nelson Dingley, 68, white-haired tariff expert on the payroll of the Senate Finance Committee; and Clayton Moore, clerk of the House Ways & Means Committee. Expert Dingley is the son of the late Nelson Dingley Jr., for 18 years a representative from Maine and chairman of the House Ways & Means Committee which framed the Tariff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Light on Lobbying, Cont. | 2/3/1930 | See Source »

Twenty-five expert U. S. physicians and surgeons journeyed last week from their homes to attend the impending convention of the Pan-American Medical Association at Panama City. Simultaneously five others, assembled at Miami, did something unusual, eminently practical. They loaded surgical equipment into two Pan American Airways' planes, started a 6,808-mi. tour of Caribbean countries, as the first "Flying Clinic." Their work will be to demonstrate latest U. S. surgical and medical practices to Latin American doctors who are unable to attend the Panama convention...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Flying Doctors | 2/3/1930 | See Source »

London, January 29--Dr. O. M. W. Sprague '94, banking and finance expert of the Harvard Business School, has been made Economic Statistical Adviser to the Board of Governors of the Bank of England. He will succeed Walter W. Stewart and probably will assume his duties in July...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPRAGUE IS MADE ADVISER TO BANK OF ENGLAND GOVERNORS | 1/30/1930 | See Source »

...Consultant on Careers adds the personal touch. Rather than acting in an advisory capacity, the office is to function as a bureau of expert opinion applying a wide experience in personnel work to the problem of the particular student. His choice of work, his educational background and practical experience should have more influence in the final decision. The cooperation of the two employment bureaus, the Senior Questionnaire, and finally this addition of personal and sympathetic interviews should combine to make the position and the occupant coincide to a more satisfactory degree than in the past...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CONSULTANT ON CAREERS | 1/29/1930 | See Source »

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