Word: notching
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Although a new bread trail in the Uneanoonue will be used for earth practices, later the team will move up to Pinkham Notch in the White Mountains where Coach Charley Procter of Dartmouth and Olympic repute, has laid out a trail down Tuckerman Ravine...
...candidates for the Varsity hockey team met for their first practice yesterday afternoon at the Arena. They were divided into two groups, one of which played at 2.30 o'clock and the other at 4 o'clock. Although the first group contained most of the top-notch players, Coach Joe Subbs asserted that the division into groups had no significance and was made merely for the sake of convenience...
...urge to play on Mr. Roosevelt's side, President Lewis Brown of Johns-Manville Corp. and Pickler Howard Heinz hastened to Washington, there to talk with the President and conservative New Dealers. Messrs. Heinz & Brown soon gathered that, if private enterprise could hoist the business curve a notch or two in the next 60 days, there was reasonable hope of keeping the Administration a little to the Right of Centre. With some tangible evidence of Recovery in his hands, the President could reasonably handle the spenders, bonuseers and inflationists of the next Congress. And very definitely Messrs. Brown & Heinz...
...Argyrol made Dr. Barnes his millions and Art his fame. His museum in Philadelphia is surrounded by a 10ft. spite fence, is opened only to close friends or students with top-notch credentials. The late Paul Guillaume, French art dealer, picked out and bought most of the Barnes Impressionist and Surrealist pictures. Today if Dr. Barnes singles out for his collection one unknown painter, that artist's reputation is supposed to be made. Dealers, therefore, treat him with kid gloves. Less scared of him is able, black-haired Belle da Costa Greene, who once closed the doors...
...with no concessions asked or given because of their sex. Women in politics may get the headlines and Sunday feature stories but it is women in Big Business that make Mrs. Reid and her friends feel that the world is moving forward. The list of lose who hold top-notch positions makes an impressive roster: Josephine Roche, who owns and runs her late father's Rocky mountain Fuel Co. (TIME, Sept. 7, 1931; Sept. 24); Mary Elizabeth Dillon, who rose from office-girl to president of the 12,000,000 Brooklyn Borough Gas Co.; Eleanor Medill Patterson, fiery editor...