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Word: schafer (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Harvard 6 History 53a Harvard 6 Indic Philology 1b Sever 18 Italian 4 Sever 23 Latin A I Sever 17 Latin 15 Sever 18 Mathematics A III Sever 18 Music 1a Music Building Palaeontology 3 Zool. Lab. 17 Philosophy 9d Emerson F Psychology 5 Bloomberg-Sandstrom Emerson A Schafer-Winn Emerson F Semitic 8 Sever 18 Slavic 5 Sever 24 Social Ethics 3 Emerson F Zoology 6b Adams Jordan Sever 5 Kilham-Wilson Sever 6 2 o'clock Chinese 24 Widener 771 Engin. Sciences 3b Robinson Hall French 29 Sever 5 Government 15 Sever 5 History 38 Sever 6 Music...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Today's Final Examination Schedule | 6/3/1929 | See Source »

...Sever 23 Government 6 Harvard 6 History 53a Harvard 6 Indic Philology 1b Sever 18 Italian 4 Sever 23 Latin A I Sever 17 Latin 15 Sever 18 Mathematics A III Sever 18 Palaeontology 3 Zool. Lab. 17 Philosophy 9d Emerson F Psychology 5 Bloomberg-Sandstrom Emerson A Schafer-Winn Emerson F Semitic 8 Sever 18 Slavic 5 Sever 24 Social Ethics 3 Emerson F Zoology 6b Adams-Jordan Sever 5 Kilham-Wilson Sever 6 2 o'clock Chinese 24 Widener 771 Engin. Sciences 3b Robinson Hall French 29 Sever 5 Government 15 Sever 5 History 38 Sever 6 Music...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Final Examination Schedule Today and Monday | 6/1/1929 | See Source »

These Few Ashes. Kenneth Vail (Hugh Sinclair) lived idly in St. Moritz, Switzerland, had philanderer's blood of Alpine frigidity. There were four bothersome women, many bothersome creditors. He faked a death, eluded the creditors, could not elude one blonde (Natalie Schafer). But by that time his Wood was rather Italian. Playwright Leonard Ide uses the episodic development with flashbacks lately popularized by Novelists Wilder & Bromfield. The second episode, with Ralph J. Locke as a French husband whose adjustment to his wife's infidelity shows skilled amorous economics, is the funniest. Otherwise the froth refuses to bubble...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Nov. 12, 1928 | 11/12/1928 | See Source »

...Chicago," whose reception with other Flood lobbyists at the White House last autumn stirred up such an indignant buzz among fastidious citizens (TIME, Nov. 21). For 12 years (1895-1901; 1903-1909), Mr. Lorimer was a U. S. Representative. Then for bribery in his election, he was as Mr. Schafer bluntly put it "kicked out of the Senate." Mr. Schafer roared that Mr. Lorimer, aside from his political disrepute, should not be privileged to come back and sit in the House during a debate on Flood Control, for the reason that Mr. Lorimer was personally interested in Flood Control...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Old Blond Boss | 4/30/1928 | See Source »

...Lorimer listened, hand cupped to ear. Members jumped up to remonstrate with Mr. Schafer. Mr. Sproul of Illinois demanded that Mr. Schafer's words be stricken from the record. Mr. Schafer refused. A knot of members surrounded Mr. Schafer while his remarks were being transcribed by the clerk. Finally "to save time" Mr. Schafer withdrew what he had said...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Old Blond Boss | 4/30/1928 | See Source »

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