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Word: haled (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...William Hale Thompson, onetime mayor of Chicago, inspired a deal of derisive amusement among the "know-it-alls" when he announced a plan to take cinema pictures of tree-climbing fish in the South Sea Islands (TIME, March 3). The New York Tribune hastened to classify him with the well-known Doctor Traprock, Baron Munchausen and others of similar notoriety. But the ex-Mayor has science on his side, though his geography may not be infallible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Nature-Faking? | 3/10/1924 | See Source »

...Boyce, R. B. Burnett, J. C. Cooley, K. B. Crooks, W. B. Dunne, H. S. Gans, W. R. Gherardi, H. G. Goodhue, T. E. Hale, Jacques Herling, J. A. MacKinnon. Richard Morey, R. L. Pruyn, J. M. Stern, R. H. Thomas, S. D. Woodard, and to the Manager, E. W. Mudge...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AWARD R. T. JONES STRAIGHT GOLF "H" | 2/15/1924 | See Source »

...fall in love with her, peace is restored. "Sauce for the Goose" is snappily translated into "fifty-fifty." A sly hint is given of the temptations to which a fashionable doctor is subjected by lovely patients with uncontrollable nerves and eyes. Never have Florence Vidor, Monte Blue, Creighton Hale, Marie Prevost acted so impossibly well. Not once is an emotion convulsively registered. Name the Man. Hall Caine and the Isle of Man are almost always sure to result in an unsanctioned baby. This production from his book, The Master of Man, runs true to form in almost every scene...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures Feb. 11, 1924 | 2/11/1924 | See Source »

...vastly influential and uplifting citizen, full of practical knowledge and of utilitarian wisdom, as well as versed in the love of the scholar. In the truest sense he ever has been a public man, though by profession an educator, much as another venerated Bostonian, the late Dr. E. E. Hale, was a veritable public man, though by profession a divine. For the word "public" has broadened with the years, and it is in no small part due to leaders like Dr. Eliot that men have come to recognize the fact that all true service, for whomever directly performed, is ultimately...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard's Grand Old Man | 2/6/1924 | See Source »

Yale harbored a boisterous crew of farmers' sons. In its bleak, ill lighted, and unheated halls was small opportunity for the niceties. It knew little of the works and life of Franklin, but worshipped the epigram and death of Nathan Hale. Place on the football team, in college office, and secret societies went to the low of brow, heavy of hand, and swift of limb...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 2/1/1924 | See Source »

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