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...Weiss '68 of Lowell House and Philadelphia, business manager; Kenric W. Hammond '69 of Leverett House and Pasadena, Calif, production chairman; James T. Kurnick '68 of Quincy House and Garden Grove, Calif., photography chairman; Kenneth M. Ludmerer '68 of Leverett House and Long Beach, Calif., editorial chairman; David C. Jimerson '68 of Eliot House and Sinking Spring, Penn., executive editor; and Richard A. Cohen of Adams House and Sacramento, Calif., clerk...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yearbook Officers | 4/20/1967 | See Source »

...president; John P. Watson Jr. '67, of Lowell House and Dover, business Manager; David W. Johnson '63, of Leverett House and Marblehead, managing editor; Ivar Viehe-Naess '67, of Lowell House and Chicago, production chairman; C.C. Pei '67, of Adams House and New York City, photography chairman; David C. Jimerson '63, of Eliot House and Reading, Pa., editorial chairman; Robert F. Sproull '67, of Quincy House and, Ithaca, N.Y., assistant business manager; Richard A. Stone '68, of Leverett House and Newton, secretary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yearbook Officers | 4/19/1966 | See Source »

...three tense days, Lewis Clark insisted that his workers would not go back. Here was a U.S. labor leader openly defying Government seizure; nobody quite knew what to do about rambunctious Mr. Clark. Then he relented. He watched the rival A.F. of L. union's President Earl Jimerson give in happily to the back-to-work order. He extracted the promise of help toward wage boosts from Agriculture Secretary Clinton Anderson and conferred with C.I.O. President Phil Murray (who apparently extracted a few promises...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Hog Butchers for the World | 2/4/1946 | See Source »

Last week the trial of Lila Jimerson for first-degree murder began in Buffalo. Suddenly the U. S. Government became interested in its ward, the defendant. Attorney General William DeWitt Mitchell instructed Richard Harkness Templeton, U. S. District Attorney at Buffalo, to take over Lila Jimerson's defense in the state court. When Mr. Templeton presented himself, with evident reluctance, at the trial, the state prosecutor, Guy Moore, fairly bellowed his protest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Witch Murder | 4/7/1930 | See Source »

When Mr. Templeton asked for a long adjournment of the trial so he could study the case, the judge's turn to explode came: "The Attorney General of the U. S. is not running this court. Motion denied." Thereafter Mr. Templeton took a very minor part in the Jimerson defense. His presence in the state court was largely due to Kaw-blooded Vice President Charles Curtis, who asked the U. S. Bureau of Indian Affairs to look after Red Lilac's rights. When asked to explain his interest in the case, Mr. Curtis declared it was "only casual...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Witch Murder | 4/7/1930 | See Source »

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