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Word: landau (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...adding machine supplanted the Dickensian bookkeeper, as the automobile did away with landau and phaeton, so the radio, it is said, is rapidly evicting the old-fashioned reciter from his or her diminishing place in the sun. Oh, many are still to be found! Professors of elocution ? even in New York, highly-skilled and successful monologists such as Ruth Draper...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Reciters | 6/11/1923 | See Source »

...region of Landau there had been little change and the surrounding region had altered little. The Saar valley, on the other hand, had shared the industrial development of the most prosperous parts of the Rheinprovinz its coal mines and those of the neighboring villages of the Palatinate had come to pro- duce 17,500,000 tons of coal a year. Numerous industrial establishments had grown up. To the north and west the lines of industrial towns were almost unbroken. More than 355,000 people now lived between the Saar frontiers of 1814 and 1815 and as many more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEAN HASKINS TREATS OF SAAR COMMISSION | 2/7/1920 | See Source »

...Downey 2L, O. O. Efird 2L, C. W. Frontz 2L, H. H. Gorman 3L, F. H. Hall 2L, J. L. Handford 3L, P. A. Hill 3L, H. H. Hoppe 2L, J. F. Hunter 3L, C. B. Jordan 3L, F. H. Kennedy 3L, W. B. Lane 3L, L. H. Landau 3L, N. E. MacKay 3L, G. E. Osborne 2L, E. R. Peterson 3L, C. F. Quillian 3L, H. F. Reindel 2L, M. P. Roberts 3L, A. M. Sonnabend 2L, J. Talamo 3L, J. L. White 2L, C. E. Whitney...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUCCESSFUL SEASON FINISHED | 1/9/1918 | See Source »

Lloyd Harold Landau 3L, of Milwaukee, Wis., president; Ralph Waldo Pyle 3L, of New Lexington, O.; Paul Pincus Cohen 3L, of Buffalo, N. Y.; John Alford Hanna 3L, of Auburn, Neb.; Dean Gooderham Acheson 3L, of Middletown, Conn.; Theodore Alexander Lightner 3L, of Detroit, Mich.; Hugo Monnig, Jr., 3L, of Jefferson City, Mr.; Clifton Murphy 2L, of Georgetown, S. C.; George Franklin Ludington 2L, of Baltimore, Md.; Arthur Robert Lewis 2L, of Newark, N. J.; Charles Monroe Thorp, Jr., 2L, of Pittsburg, Pa.; Arthur Durham Platt 2L, of Portland, Oregon; Irwin Henry Fathschild 2L, of Chicago, Ill.; Sigurd Neland...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Landau President of Law Review | 10/18/1917 | See Source »

...Chairman Landau then introduced President Lowell, who noted the advantages which the small number of students would bring to each man: the relations between the professors and students will be much more intimate, smaller classes will permit more men to join in discussions, and wil enable instructors to give more time to each Individual. "Although we are in a state of war," President Lowell said, "the importance of the law is only more enhanced, inasmuch as it is crystallized civilization, and therefore a great steadying force in times such as these...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LAW STEADYING FORCE IN WAR | 9/28/1917 | See Source »

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