Word: maloy
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Messrs. Browne & Bioff had not long been tops in I. A. T. S. E. before it began to expand. President of a motion picture projectionists' union was a Chicago racketeer named Tommy Maloy. President Maloy was murdered in 1935. Mr. Browne took over the union. One Clyde Osterberg tried to organize a rival union of movie operators. He was murdered. Louis ("Two Gun") Alterie was doing well at organizing theatre janitors when he, too, was murdered. Mr. Browne inherited this union...
...Great Lakes district they claim 84,000 members, new and old, among 200,000 steel workers. While steel firms were combatting their organization drive by granting wage increases, C. I. O. won an unexpected victory when one of their supporters, Elmer J. Maloy of Duquesne, Pa. was elected head of a company union council of Carnegie-Illinois Corp., big subsidiary of U. S. Steel...
Alan S. Harrington, J. Spence Harvin, Stanley W. Herzfeld, James C. Hopkins, Jr., Henry P. Hoppin, William W. Hunt, Danforth Jackson, William S. Knowles, Charles W. Lawrence, Adrian F. Levy, Roger C. Lyndon, John D. Maloy, Lewis H. Mills, Robert H. Morse, Henry S. Mowbray, Robert D. Nuner, Schuyler Pardee, Constantine W. Patterson, S. Allen Pendleton, George W. Phillips, Benjamin Pitman, Jr., Edward P. Richardson, Jr., Edward H. Schoyer, Paul P. Selvin, Willard P. Sheppard, Jr., Edric B. Smith, Jr., Gray Taylor, Elkan Turk, Jr., George S. Viereck, Jr., Hugh G. Williams, David B. Wire, Richard Witkin...
...first time in its history, Little Hall established a House committee at a meeting Saturday night. Dale Pontius, proctor of the Hall appointed to the committee the following members: Henry H. Buckman, III '38, chairman; David Clayman '38, John L. Davidson '38, William I. Lourie, Jr. '38, John D. Maloy '39, Samuel Ritvo '38, Carl F. Schilkowsky...