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Word: suderman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...locker room with just a two-point edge. Green paced UCSB with 10 of her 16 points before the break. The two squads traded baskets for most of the second half, and only in the waning minutes did Harvard appear to be in trouble. Two straight baskets from Kat Suderman (10 points) put the Gauchos up seven, setting the stage for the Crimson’s last-minute heroics. —Staff writer Emily W. Cunningham can be reached at ecunning@fas.harvard.edu...

Author: By Emily W. Cunningham, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Resilient Crimson Topples UC Santa Barbara in Comeback Thriller | 1/4/2009 | See Source »

...Baskets on free tries: Harvard--McConnell 6, Fitts 2. Clark--Smith 3, Fowler. Free tries missed: Harvard--Fitts 5, McConnell 4. Clark--Smith 7, Fowler 3. Fouls called on Harvard: Miller 3, Chase 3, Fitts, McLeish, Feiring, McConnell. Clark--Keenlayside 4, Winn 3, Cutler, Smith, Fowler. Umpire, Hoyt. Referee, Suderman. Time, 20-minute halves...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY FIVE NOSES OUT CLARK TEAM 26-24 | 12/18/1920 | See Source »

...Christmas Monthly is unusually large and, on the whole, readable. It is headed with four very long literary criticisms-Mrs. Wharton, by H. L. Warner '03; Miss Fiona Macleod and the Celtic Movement, by L. Ward '03; Hermann Suderman, by Ernest Bernbaum '03, and Onota Watanns, unsigned. All of them are carefully written, show appreciative method and skill, but except for their actual literary merit, are not particularly interesting reading. The last named is perhaps the most pleasing. It is comparatively brief, tells something that is good to know, in a manner, pleasant and graceful-and above...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Christmas Monthly. | 12/20/1902 | See Source »

...central attraction in the April number of the Monthly, out today, is a carefully written and thoughtful analysis of the "Dramas of Herman Sudermann," by Gaillard T. Lapsley. After critically reviewing the principal plays of that author, the writer characterizes Suderman as powerful, though ineffective through diffusion. The coarseness and obsceneness so evident in the plays are excused on the ground that Sudermann, like all Germans, was not so sensitive to this sort of thing as are the English speaking people...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Monthly. | 4/29/1896 | See Source »

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