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

...Harvard Dramatic Club is to be commended for its courage in producing plays which would otherwise not be seen in Boston," declared Philip Hale, music and dramatic critic of the Boston Herald staff, to a CRIMSON reporter yesterday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HALE COMMENDS COURAGE SHOWN BY DRAMATIC CLUB | 11/2/1925 | See Source »

...selected paintings. Mr. Swift chose the only Sargent in the Gallery, a portrait valued at $15,000. The second name was Charles Clifton, President of the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy, who chose Heavy Weather, a marine painting by Irving Wiles. The third, James Parmelee of Washington, acquired Lilian Hale's Spring Reverie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Lottery | 10/12/1925 | See Source »

Harvest. This rather sombre drama of the farm country was saved chiefly by authenticity of atmosphere and two exceptionally competent performances. Louise Closser Hale, one of the best of our grey-haired actresses, played the farm mother, and Augustin Duncan, her suspendered husband, was as close to perfection as the author could have hoped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre: New Plays: Oct. 5, 1925 | 10/5/1925 | See Source »

Times have changed, however, and if recent press dispatches are to be credited, Dean Frederick Sheetz Jones has announced the possible erection of an academic skyscraper in the center of Yale campus which will overshadow Nathan Hale and Connecticut and even the hated purlieus of Hush Hall. Shades of Timothy Dwight! How will God-Bless-You Mary ever collect her washing and how will Jerry deliver the Lit and the Oldest College Daily at the twentieth floor? Why by express elevator of course, and the undergraduate of the future will lounge elegantly about in libraries, billiard parlors and sun rooms...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO HEAVEN WITH YALE! | 9/28/1925 | See Source »

...vague, but full of hope. The present is his immediate jewel. Four golden years confront him--years embellished in his imagination with the gilt and tinsel trappings gleaned from books on college life. And out of the brightness of the vision emerges a youth in cap and gown, a hale of glory about his head, a scroll of parchment in his hand. In the days of ancient Greece a youth with such a dream would have consulted the Delphio oracle to learn the meaning of the strange, portentous words the scroll contained. Today the Freshman needs no seer or prophet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SO MUCH FOR THE ROPES | 9/24/1925 | See Source »

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