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Word: koerber (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Hopkins--Koerber grounded to Coppinger. Schlerf reached first on a passed ball but was thrown out at second by Durant. Doyle reached first on a wild throw by Mannino. English fouled out to Coppinger. No runs...

Author: By Ed Seeger, (JOHNS HOPKINS NEWS-LETTER) | Title: Godin's 6-Hitter in Opener Checks Johns Hopkins, 7-1 | 4/5/1948 | See Source »

...Hopkins--Koerber popped to Coulson. Schlerf struck out. Doyle singled to left. English grounded to Coulson. No runs...

Author: By Ed Seeger, (JOHNS HOPKINS NEWS-LETTER) | Title: Godin's 6-Hitter in Opener Checks Johns Hopkins, 7-1 | 4/5/1948 | See Source »

Died. Marie Dressier (Leila Koerber), 64, cinemactress; of uremia complicated by cancer; in Santa Barbara. Canadian-born, she went on the stage when she was 5, played a profusion of light roles climaxed in 1910 by the lead in Tittle's 'Nightmare in which she sang "Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl." Thereafter she appeared in cinemas with Charlie Chaplin (Tillie's Punctured Romance, Tillie's Tomato Surprise). After the War she found herself unable to get engagements, tried futilely to make money in Florida real estate. When she was 60, almost penniless, she scored an overnight hit as "Marthy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Aug. 6, 1934 | 8/6/1934 | See Source »

Born in Canada (like Mary Pickford and Norma Shearer), Lelia Koerber (Marie Dressier) grew up in Cobourg, Ontario where her father was a music teacher. At five she performed as Cupid in a church pageant, made her audience laugh by falling off a pedestal. At 14, under her stage name (borrowed from an aunt) she joined an itinerant stock opera troupe, finally got a chance to understudy Katisha in The Mikado for $8 a week. Eight years later, playing in the same theatre, she was getting $800 a week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Tugboat Annie | 8/7/1933 | See Source »

Seven years ago, Marie Dressier (born Lelia Koerber) offered to play in vaudeville for $2,000 a week, could find no takers. She was ready to give up acting to try running a hotel in Paris when Director Allan Dwan offered her a job in Hollywood. The part that made her a cinema star, as she had been a stage star 25 years before,* came later-a bit in Anna Christie. Said Cinemactress Dressier: "They make you a star and then you starve. All I want is a small part to come in and upset the plot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Year's Best | 11/23/1931 | See Source »

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