Word: redfield
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...frontier town of Redfield, Mass. (now Deerfield), was in poor shape for defense against the French and their Indian allies. Its palisade was old and rotten and a heavy snowfall had made it even less of a protection. There were only 150 men in the town. The cold and sleepy sentries did not suspect the attack until it was too late. But the Indian warriors, under the nominal command of French officers, did not massacre everybody. They captured all the men, women and children they could, made off with them on the cold journey to Canada, to hold them...
...Thomas and Socialist Clark did not know, or deliberately failed to mention, was that the explosive shell advertisement had appeared in American Machinist just once-on May 6, 1915. Its publication then caused a great popular outcry which aroused the U. S. State Department and caused Secretary of Commerce Redfield to deal a stinging rebuke to American Machinist. Few months ago it was reprinted, in its true historical seating, in the book Merchants of Death by Engelbrecht & Hanighen (TIME...
...Advisers to the Expedition are: Professor Joseph Barcroft, Cambridge, England; Dr. Hellinut De Terra, Yale University; Lawrence J. Henderson, professor of Biological Chemistry; Earnest A. Hooton, Professor of Anthropology; Professor August Krogh, Copenhagen University; Professor Alfred Redfield, Harvard University; Dr. Donald D. Van Slyke, Rockefeller Institute...
Creation of the position of Director of the Biological Laboratories of the University and the appointment of Alfred C. Redfield '14, professor of Physiology, as first director were announced today by President Conant...
...accordance with this vote, Professor Oakes Ames, Chairman of the division, has appointed Alfred C. Redfield, Professor of Physiology, as chairman of a committee to consider the general details of the reorganization. Commenting on the change, Professor Ames expressed his hope that the change will cause the teaching and study at Harvard "to become broader in scope and break down the artificial barriers which have often hampered those engaged in biological research." The change has been regarded as necessary by others in the department...