Word: schoeneman
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Captain Joe Noble, Bob Foster and John Watkins posted the only Crimson wins, as Yale swept the other five matches. Noble, wrestling at 147--one weight lower than his normal class--easily defeated Bob Schoeneman, 4-0. Watkins, also dropping down a class to 130, took a 7-3 decision from Bob Kramer...
...Crimson sophomore Carl Kludt will wrestle Bob Kramer, while John Watkins meets Eli Tim Welles at 137. Nick Estabrook at 147 and senior King Holmes at 167 round out the varsity line-up, facing Bob Schoeneman and Tom Miller, respectively...
...scandals shocked the U.S. conscience, but they were nothing compared to the corruption revealed in the Bureau of Internal Revenue. As the man who had presided over one of the messiest messes in Washington history, Internal Revenue Commissioner George Schoeneman was allowed to resign because of "ill health." Former BIR Commissioner Joseph Nunan Jr., convicted of evading $91,000 in income taxes for 1946-50, sentenced to five years in prison, wailed that despite his job, he simply had not been much of a tax expert. BIR Chief Counsel Charles Oliphant resigned angrily after Witness Abraham Teitelbaum said...
...expensive cravats. The ties, said Grunewald. went to "high-class people." The subcommittee got a list of "club" members from Charvet et Fils, then, red-faced, decided not to make the names public. ¶In 1950 Grunewald lunched with Dorothy Lamour and her husband William Howard, along with George Schoeneman and Charles Oliphant, then top BIR men. The Howards had tax troubles, but Grunewald assured the committee that he knew nothing of them. His buddies Schoeneman and Oliphant just called him up and asked, "Would you like to come along and meet the celebrities...
Another Grunewald pal was George Schoeneman, then commissioner of Internal Revenue. Schoeneman introduced Grunewald to Charles Oliphant, then the Revenue Bureau's chief counsel. They became fast friends; Grunewald gave Oliphant a $600 television set, two $200 room air-conditioning units for his house, an electric train for his children. Said Grunewald: "I'd call him up and say, 'Charlie, you happen to be busy right now?' And he would say he wasn't, so I'd go over and we'd have a talk." About what? "Anything," said Grunewald, "except we never...