Word: bail
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...lifeboat, was convicted on the same charge, given four years in jail. The Ward Line was fined $10,000, its Executive Vice President Henry Edward Cabaud $5,000 (TIME, Feb. 10, 1936). Mr. Cabaud and the Line paid their fines, but Warms and Abbott appealed, meanwhile stayed free on bail. Last week, from his cottage in Morristown, N. J., gaunt, sad-eyed William Warms was called to a neighbor's telephone. Few minutes later he ran back shouting...
...followed by 50 State police who arrested all the strikers under warrants for trespassing. The strikers got up with good humor, took their banjo and guitar and marched through the deserted streets to police court. There at 2 a. m. a sleepy police judge released them without bail for appearance later in town court. Next day the strikers picketed, the plant operated peacefully...
...employes and refused to bargain collectively, urged the strikers to give up. Believing that they would be licked in a fight, the 345 sit-downers marched out, were carted off to Los Angeles County jail in police wagons and busses, all but three score of them later released without bail. At Northrop Corp., subsidiary of Douglas, 200 sit-downers then walked out rather than risk indictment...
...according to reports, one of the four boys was a son of Councilman Michael Sullivan, and shortly three squad cars loaded with Cambridge Police arrived and took Coquillete to jail on $50 bail...
...jail he found a battery of newspaper photograhers and reporters, but was shielded from them by Charles R. Apted, Superintendent of the Yard police, who also furnished the bail...