Word: julians
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...profits of its members, that the Department of Justice grew suspicious that it was a combination in restraint of trade, launched anti-trust proceedings in 1931. The trial lasted six months, the briefs filled 1,500 pages, the testimony 10,000 pages. In 1934 Manhattan's Federal Judge Julian William Mack handed down a 100,000-word opinion, holding among other things that the Institute and its members, who accounted for most of the sugar refined in the U. S., were clearly out to "preserve uniformity in price structure and to maintain relatively high prices...
Keen, mellow and eminent among Federal jurists is 70-year-old Julian William Mack, who sits on the U. S. Circuit Court in New York. A realistic Zionist, Judge Mack overcame his detestation of titular honors last summer to accept honorary presidency of the First World Jewish Congress in Geneva. Devoted to the sanity of the law, he has shown a liberalism no less profound, if less spectacular than that of his old friend, Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis. His decision in the famed anti-trust case against the Sugar Institute in 1934 stands as a weighty legal precedent...
...Julian Nieckoski '37; Frederick C. Novello '38; James P. O'Donnell '39; John A. O'Keefe '37; Joseph Palmer, 2nd. '37; Frederic E. Pamp '39; Sotirios Papafrangos '39; Richard Paull '38; Sumner A. Pendleton '39; Milton S. Pratiner '38; Robert K. Presson '39; John J. Reidy, Jr. '38; Edward H. Riddle '37; Lorimer Robey '38; Harvey A. Robinson '38; Theodore H. Rome '38; Phillip N. Ross '38; Sidney D. Ross '39; Robert H. Salk '38; Leon N. Satenstein '39; Leroy A. Schreiber '39; William F. Schreiter '38; Richard E. Schultes '37; Julius L. Shack '39; Joseph Share '37; Robert...
Herbert N. Dillard 3G, Julian Hawes 1G, Wilson D. Michell 1G, William T. Pecora 2d, 2G, Horace Winchell 1G, and Francis J. Whitfield 1G, received Austin fellowships...
...tried such crude tactics on chimpanzees in London. Vienna. Berlin and South America, the apes simply got up from their unnatural positions with an air of patient boredom. He then concluded that the intelligence of his subjects called for human methods. By this time Britain's gaunt Biologist Julian Huxley, interested in the experiments, had made it possible for the Austrian to carry on at the London...