Word: chelsea
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Standing in the ballroom of Atlantic City's Hotel Chelsea, Sidney Hillman last week cried: "You know the history of labor is division, and every time there is division it destroys everything we have built...
Snub-nosed, horn-rimmed, soft-spoken Chief Herman E. Gutheim looks more like a Harvard professor than a Hollywood fire chief. (He does teach first aid to many faculty members and university employees in evening classes.) Reminiscing about the day in 1908 when Chelsea burnt down or showing his souvenirs from the time when every Cambridge householder was required to possess one ladder and two leather buckets for the bucket brigade, Chief Gutheim points out that in the 41 years of fire fighting which he can remember Cambridge has always been rated A-1 by the underwriters. This has been...
Another day he took the Queen (who had been selecting 60 suites of Great-grandma Victoria's furniture from Windsor Castle to give to people bombed out of their homes) for a tour of bombed Chelsea, Fulham, Marylebone. In Chelsea ARPers told Their Majesties how they had worked seven and a half hours moving ten tons of wreckage to free a girl: they had had to use their bodies as struts to hold up the debris while tunneling. Said the King: "You have done grand work." Said George Pitman: "It's all in the day's work...
...Concord Edward S. Peterson Zika Bakeef, Weston Frederick W. Phinney Betins Townsend, Belmont Parker de S. Pitts Ruth Hallenbrook, Brookline David A. Poole, Jr. Bolling Bird, Winsor Ralph H. Potter Mary Jane Taliagerro, Bradford Junior College Stewart E. Power Elizabeth Rockefeller, Miss Wheelock's Joseph C. Prince Isabelle Klein, Chelsea George E. Putnam, Jr. Margaret Harper, New York William McN. Rand, Jr. Alice Smith, Concord Charles E. Reed, Jr. Margie Brodee, New York Dana Reed Shirley Letts, Wellesley Kenneth I. Richter Rose Rowe, Bridgewater Peter B. Robinson Nancy Bennit, Dana Hall Paul V. Roche Edith M. Grace, State Teachers' College...
When Dean Landis speaks on administrative law in Langdell Hall of an evening, not only do young lawyers from Chelsea and East Cambridge tramp in to bear him, but the whole country knows that an expert, a former head of the SEC, is talking. Last night he tore into the Logan Bill, now in Congress, which would practically emasculate agencies like the AAA, NLRB, and SEC. It is a highly technical point--this question of what the powers of such special agencies should be--but it is fundamental to the whole philosophy of the New Deal; and the Logan Bill...