Word: dudley
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...following will act as ushers under the leadership of A. H. O'Neil, Head Usher, J. N. Barbee; Dudley Bell; H. W. Brandon; L. D. Brayton; W. N. Bump; H. W. Burna; J. P. Chase; Henry Chauncoy; J. P. Crosby; Langdon Dearborn; A. O. Fordyce; E. B. Jackson; V. O. Jones; W. B. Jones; Joseph Morrill Jr; William Mulford; P. H. Nitxe; Edward Page Jr.; W. C. Peet Jr.; J. L. Pool; C. A. Pratt Jr.; W. G. Saltonstall; R. W. Sawyer; Daniel Simonds 2nd; R. W. Turner; John Watts; W. H. White
...following are the ushers who will work under the supervision of A. B. O'Neil,--Head Usher. Dudley Bell, H. W. Bragdon, L. D. Brayton, W. N. Bump, J. P. Chase, Henry Chauncey, J. P. Crosby, Langdon Dearborn, A. O. Fordyce, E. B. Jackson, V. O. Jones, Joseph Morill, William Mulford, P. H. Nitze, Edward Page. W. C. Peet, J. L. Pool, C. A. Pratt, W. J. Saltonstall, R. W. Sawyer, Daniel Simonds, H. W. Burns, R. W. Turner, John Watts, W. H. White...
...Magie '28 has been appointed head usher, but the list of his assistants is still incomplete. As it stands now, however, the list includes D. R. K. Barnes '27, Dudley Bell '28, G. W. Blowers '28, W. R. Chase 1 G. B., A. G. Churchill '29, Alexander Donald '27, A. O. Fordvee '28, Hamilton Heard '28, W. W. Lord '28, W. R. Medders '28, William Mulford '28, O. M. Raymond, 3 L. J. C. Sprague '28 and W. S. Youngman...
...River from Queens." The plot: a Dry millionaire soap manufacturer, arrested in a night club, switches to the Wets after a month in jail, with such success that he is elected to Congress, and his daughter and pet office girl are free to marry their respective tenors. Bide Dudley (dramatic critic of the N. Y. Evening World) and Louis Simon (actor in the play) wrote the book, worked in many a laugh, also insinuated a jail scene, one of those atrociously vulgar burlesques on sex perversion so popular this year. It was greeted enthusiastically, justifying entirely the discretion...
Among those vexed by this decision, which in some respects seemed evasive, were Justice McKinney, the dissenter, and Lawyer Dudley Field Malone of Manhattan who, with Lawyer Clarence S. Darrow of Chicago, had defended Teacher Scopes. Lawyer Darrow, resting in Mobile, Ala., held his peace but Lawyer Malone spoke out: "We did not go there to save Scopes from an excessive fine. Nobody cared whether he was fined $100 or $1,000. . . . Our object in going to Tennessee was first, to expose the ignorance and intolerance which had produced such a law and, secondly, to test its constitutionality by ultimately...