Word: hatfields
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...When the prices of beef, pork, and lamb become high, as during and immediately following the War, the U. S. begins to eat horse meat. Last year more than 100,000 U. S. horses were slaughtered, chiefly for the export market. **Associated in the research were Solomon Augustus Hatfield, Assistant Professor of Medicine, and George Irving Nelson, researcher...
Marching in the Young Turks' ranks were Allen of Kansas, Glenn of Illinois, Goldsborough of Maryland, Hastings of Delaware, Hatfield of West Virginia, Hebert of Rhode Island, Kean of New Jersey, McCulloch of Ohio, Patterson of Missouri, Townsend of Delaware, Walcott of Connecticut. From the Old Guard they had recruited Deneen of Illinois, Fess of Ohio, Goff of West Virginia, McNary of Oregon, Oddie of Nevada et al. There was even talk of unhorsing Old Guardsman Watson as Republican Leader and putting Senator McNary into his place...
...Milton Academy; Herman Gross, Boston Latin School; N. Z. Grover, Boston Latin School; A. M. Halpern, Boston Latin School; A. C. Harrison, Jr., Saint Paul's School; S. M. Hart, Hempstead High School; A. M. Hatch, Brookline High School; R. M. C. Hatch, Saint Mark's School; H. C. Hatfield, Evanston High School; C. E. Herlihy, Boston Latin School; B. A. Herman, Boston Latin School; J. D. Hersey, Warren Harding High School; C. H. Hollis, Chauncy Hall School; H. D. Horblit, Boston Latin School; J. B. Howard, Exeter; J. N. M. Howells, Saint Paul's School...
...Hatfield's offer of the University Theatre for the production of the "Strange Interlude" should win him the sympathy of a large majority of his hitherto moving-picture-going public. Better plays have been written than Eugene O'Neil's Pulitzer Prize Play, but it is hardly surprising that such unreasonable and bigoted pseudo-puritanism on the part of Boston authorities should be met by widespread resentment, manifested not only by indignant letters and editorials in the press, but by such practical offers as Mr. Hat-field...
...staging of the "Strange Interlude" on Harvard Square became a real possibility yesterday when Charles E. Hatfield, owner of the University Theatre on Harvard Square, offered his stage to the Theatre Guild of New York as a scene for the production of Eugene O'Neil's Pulitzer Prize Play recently banned in Boston...