Buyer was reelected in 1935 and 1937 but lost in 1939 to Wilder W. Hartley.
Thornton Wilder | Billy Wilder | Laura Ingalls Wilder | Gene Wilder | Nina Hartley | Hartley Wintney | Rose Wilder Lane | Bob Hartley | Wilder Penfield | Lindsay Hartley | Hartley's | W. Lee Wilder | Webb Wilder | Van Wilder | Shannon–Hartley theorem | Matthieu Hartley | Matthew Wilder | Marsden Hartley | John T. Wilder | Hartley | Hal Hartley | Douglas Wilder | Almanzo Wilder | Abe Hartley | William James Hartley | Wilder's | Wilder | Trevor Hartley | Thomas Hartley | Ralph Hartley |
Literary friends from this period included mainly other ex-soldiers: Anthony Bertram, Edmund Blunden, Vivian de Sola Pinto, A. E. Coppard, Louis Golding, Robert Graves, L. P. Hartley, and Alan Porter.
With his party in the majority, Hartley served as the Chairman of the Committee on Education and Labor in the 80th United States Congress.
It was proposed as an alternative to the Fourier transform by R. V. L. Hartley in 1942, and is one of many known Fourier-related transforms.
J. R. Hartley – author of another fictitious book, written after it became famous.
Newspaper publishers called for aid from the authors of the law, U.S. Senator Robert A. Taft (R - Ohio) and Congressman Fred A. Hartley, Jr. (R - New Jersey) The ITU and Woodruff Randolph won in Chicago.
Mark Ashurst-McGee, Ronald O. Barney, Alexander L. Baugh, Joseph I. Bentley, Joseph F. Darowski, Kay Darowski, Karen Lynn Davidson, Steven C. Harper, William G. Hartley, Andrew H. Hedges, Robin Scott Jensen, Gordon A. Madsen, Max H. Parkin, Alex D. Smith, Steven R. Sorensen, Morris A. Thurston, Grant Underwood, Jeffrey N. Walker, David J. Whittaker, Robert J. Woodford.