Word: asaph
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Henry W. Abbot. Jr., Verdi L. Barnes, Walter M. Belenky, David M. Brahms, Henry M. Brown, Asaph B. Churchill, John W. C. DeKiewiet, Nathan P. Dodge III, James J. Doty, David K. Gately, William V. Gillen, Albert F. Gordon (captain), Joel R. Landau, Carl A. Pescosolido Jr., David S. Rosenthal, James E. Schlaeppi, David C. Spinney, William T. Thompson III, Frederic B. Washburn, Richard L. Williams, Jr., William B. Dockser (manager...
DEATH PLAYS SOLITAIRE-R. L. Goldman- Coward-McCann ($2). News Publisher Asaph Clume and Reporter Rufus Reed again team up, crack the secret behind the shooting of a criminal lawyer. Tough, but not bogus tough...
...more of the meetings on Nov. 5-8, 1886, were Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Judge Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Phillips Brooks, Gen. Alexander D. Lawton of Georgia, Gov. George D. Robinson of Massachusetts, President Mark Hopkins of Williams, Senator George F, Hoar, George William Curtis, Alexander Agassiz, Asaph Hall, Samuel P. Langley, and J. Ingersoll Bowditch. President Eliot, of course, presided at most of the sessions. Delegated brought greetings from many American institutions and from the Universities of Cambridge, Edinburgh and Heidelberg...
Friends of Mr. Sweeney (Warner). Asaph Holliday (Charles Ruggles), hero of this picture, is a journalistic guppy, small, ashamed and ludicrous, writing timid editorials in a journal of opinion called The Balance. When his old college mate, Rixey (Eugene Pallette), arrives in town, a change takes place in Asaph. He calls up his assistant (Ann Dvorak) and orders her to come to dinner. At a swank night club, to which he gains admittance by saying to the doorman "We are friends of Mr. Sweeney," he gambles coolly with $1,000 chips under the impression that they cost $1. Finally, with...
...enlarging- 8,000 mi. across-which to some astronomers suggested it might be a cloud of dust kicked up by the impact of a huge meteorite. Others thought that, since the spot was observed to rotate precisely in the schedule determined for the planet by the late Professor Asaph Hall (10 hr. 14 min. 24 sec.), it could not be a drifting cloud, might be a volcanic eruption in a fixed area. To still others a volcano on cold Saturn seemed hardly more imaginable than spontaneous combustion in a snowball.* Still an enigma is Saturn's canker...