Word: stanleys
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...goals in the postseason. The worst part about facing a pest is having the pest score. For my money, Lemieux can be on my playoff roster any year. He's now won Stanley Cups now with three different teams, and he garnered the Conn Smythe trophy for his effort with the 1995 Devils...
...there's a series out West as well--arguably for the Stanley Cup--between Colorado, who many consider the best team in the league, and Dallas, merely the defending Stanley Cup champions. As you read this, this series may already have been decided with the Stars gearing up to defend their crown in the Finals...
...that standard, the coolest dudes on Wall Street are famed hedge-fund manager George Soros and his chief lieutenant, Stanley Druckenmiller. Professional day traders, they got caught in the spring turmoil too--and compounded their losses by betting against the dollar, apparently in a futile attempt to make back what they had lost on plunging tech stocks. Last week Soros--best known for winning $1 billion in a bet against the British pound in 1992--publicly overhauled his firm, saying he would no longer take big risks. Druckenmiller, as chastened as those twenty-somethings, abruptly left the company...
...FAMILY Convinced that you and your dog should be on better speaking terms? Well, you can get there with a little practice. In his new book, How to Speak Dog, Stanley Coren claims that a dog has the intellect and vocabulary of a two-year-old child--but humans must learn to interpret their canine's nonverbal noises, tail wags and other body language. A sample: for dogs, a yawn is not a sign of fatigue but of anxiety. And each of those wags can tell a variety of stories, depending on posture and pace. More about Coren's theories...
...through body language and speech pattern. David Parker's Eugene, who seems to float through the action going on around him, doesn't really begin to develop as a character until halfway through the first act, when he begins to learn about girls from his older brother, Stanley. From that moment on, Eugene becomes increasingly more interesting and, despite his numerous internal commentaries in the form of his memoirs, increasingly more real to the audience...