Word: metzgers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
THOMAS R. METZGER Metzgers Potatoes Inc. Greenville, Mich...
Judge Lindsey is a member of Section K (Sociology) of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Last week a fellow member, the University of Indiana's Charles R. Metzger, trotted out one of the Lindseyan formulas, with a few-new furbelows but apparently identical in substance. He recommended divorce by mutual consent for couples who cannot be reconciled. Legalization of such divorces, stated Professor Metzger. would end "much subterfuge and perjury which is now prevalent in every divorce court in the United States." He said his plan had nothing to do with Judge Lindsey's "companionate...
Professor Metzger's pound of cure for marital crackups was part of a "Round Table'' conference on "The Family." An ounce of prevention was suggested by the University of Chicago's Dr. Leonard S. Cottrell Jr. in a report garnished with brand new statistics. For more than two years with Professor Ernest Watson Burgess. Dr. Cottrell plied 526 young married couples with questions, got answers. They found that chances for harmony were best...
Died. William E. Metzger, 64, automotive pioneer, co-organizer of Cadillac Motor Car Co.; of heart disease after four years' illness; in Detroit. He attended the world's first automobile show (London, 1895), returned to build & operate the first U. S. automobile retail showroom (Detroit, 1897), help stage the first U. S automobile show (New York's Madison Square Garden...
...approval were Chancellor Elmer Ellsworth Brown of New York University ("Would be glad to enter such a combination"); President Daniel L. Marsh of Boston University ("Full accord"); President William Wistar Comfort of Haverford College ("Perfectly evident"). Less sure of the scheme as it stood were Dean of Men Fraser Metzger of Rutgers University ("Dr. Butler's position . . . is well founded"); President Ernest Martin Hopkins of Dartmouth ("Certainly worth considering"); President Thomas Sovereign Gates of University of Pennsylvania ("Sympathetic consideration"); President Frank Aydelotte of Swarthmore ("Evils of academic sports . . . come really from the spectators"); President Walter Dill Scott of Northwestern...