Word: haling
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Suspicious Eye. Not so friendly to the treaty was Maine's Senator Frederick Hale, chairman of the Naval Affairs Com mittee. A Big-Navy man, Senator Hale called his committee together to make an independent inquiry into its effects upon the Navy. The Hale hearings have no official standing, are for the patent pur pose of drumming up treaty opposition, if any, by staging a publicity sideshow. As Witness No. 1, Senator Hale summoned Secretary of the Navy Charles Francis Adams, a London delegate, to explain and elucidate. Later would be called Admirals William Veazie Pratt and Hilary...
...consist of speeches made by two representatives of the two countries involved. While the decision will be left in the hands of a tribunal made up of preminent lawyers of the Law School faculty as well as from practicing alterneys. This tribunal will consist of the following: R W Hale. Esq. '92 of the Boston Bar: Laurence Curtis and 16 also of the Boston Bar and Professor G G Wilson of the Harvard Law School...
...whipped the House into a lather of sentimental excitement about War veterans, got his proposal adopted by a vote of 324-49 after Mr. Johnson, outraged, asked that his name be removed from the measure. Congressman Wood pointed out that under this bill a veteran, hale and hearty, could contract gout on Dec. 31, 1929, blame it on the War eleven years before, collect, under the broad presumption clause, $225 per month as compensation. His prediction was that the House measure would add from 500 million to a billion dollars per year to the U. S. cost of veteran...
HARVARD M. I. T. Gulick, g. g., Reed Myerson, e.pt. e.pt., Deyarmond Robinson, pt. pt., Motter Hartnett, 1d. 1d., Coffey Faude, 2d. 2d., Walker Brinckley, 3d. 3d., Koskula Nido, e. c., Hale Pope, 3a. 3a., Kocher Glenn, 2a. 2a., Wagar Foshay, 1a. 1a., Goodhand Johnson, o.h. o.h., Puffer Sanders, 1h. 1.h., Zonek...
...into a fit ot rage that might carry him to -his grave, although that "double pneumonia, with some complications" could do him nothing to pay attention to. When Primo de Rivera's body was carried to Spain, just a few days after Weyler found him self sound and hale again, the people of old Madrid were surprised at seeing how well soldiers marched in funeral procession. J discovered that during Weyler's sickness they were rehearsing a funeral march, expecting to make use of it any day-they used it, on the other hand, for Weyler...