Word: hutcheson
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Anne Gulick, daughter of Professor C. B. Gulick of the Classics department, will deliver a piano recital this evening at 7.15 o'clock in the Dunster House common room. Miss Gulick has studied with Carl Faelten of Boston and Ernest Hutcheson of New York. After making her debut in Athens she played several times with the Boston Symphony Orchestra and has given recitals both here and abroad. As usual the affair will be open to members of Dunster House and their guests. The program follows: Chorale Bach Rondo in A minor Mozart Papillons Schumann Jeu D'Eau Ravel Poisson...
...before the Board of Mediation, the railroad organized a company union, attempted to inveigle Brotherhood men into it. On the ground that the railroad would by this means control both sides of the wage argument before the Board of Mediation, the Brotherhood asked U. S. District Judge Joseph Chappell Hutcheson Jr. of Texas for an order restraining the company from interfering with the Brotherhood's organization. It was charged that 1,700 Brothers had been intimidated into joining the company's union...
...February 1928 Judge Hutcheson issued one of the very few injunctions on the side of Labor. He ordered the railroad to dissolve its company union and leave the Brotherhood alone. S. P. attorneys hastened to the Supreme Court with an appeal, claiming the Railway Labor Act was unconstitutional because it deprived their clients of "property rights" (i. e. selection of employes) without due process...
...Givens Torain, assistant to Mr. Waid, had violated the provisions of the injunction and therefore should be sent to jail until they purged themselves of contempt. The Brotherhood alleged these S. P. officials had failed to dissolve the company union and to cease interference with brotherhood affairs, as Judge Hutcheson had ordered. Filed last February, this petition, by joint agreement, was held in abeyance until the Supreme Court should rule on the validity of the injunction. Fortified by last week's decision the Brotherhood pressed to punish its employers as insistently as any employer would seek to penalize...
From Peshawar, on India's northern frontier, last week, two Scotch bankers, J. L. Hutcheson and J. V. Dunsmore of the Imperial Bank of India, motored out with an escort of a native sergeant and two soldiers to see the sunrise from the top of the Khyber Pass. Enraged by the sight of two Scotchmen looking at the Indian sun, the Indian sergeant ran amok, shot and killed both the Scotch bankers, was killed himself by the two Indian privates. Peshawar officials hastened to deny that the frenzied Indian sergeant was connected with the placid St. Gandhi movement...