Word: offerred
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...work of the former committee will be in the omission of the series of lectures in the Union which was formerly the most noticable feature of the vocational program. Although these lectures were of undoubted value in showing students new phases of the vocations discussed, they failed to offer any adequate solution of individual difficulties. In view of this defect the men in charge of the work this year have decided to substitute for these general lectures a series of group talks and individual conferences. The attempt will be to get men experienced in various fields to talk with...
...accordance with a policy tried out last fall, the Treasury last week sent forth word asking holders of Third Liberty Loan bonds to offer them directly to the Government for cash through Federal Reserve Banks. The owners of the bonds may set the price at which they offer them, and the Government will buy those offered at the lowest prices. In this way it is planned to invest about $100,000,000 of the sinking fund for public debt retirement. Proposals must be made before March 10, and payment will be made on March...
Speaking at Birmingham, the political seat of the Chamberlain family, Sir Austen incautiously gave the impression that he expected to attend the special session of the Assembly and Council of the League of Nations, called for March 8, with complete freedom to offer British support to the candidacy of Poland and that he would very probably do so if "circumstances" seemed to warrant...
...employing official refused but let him continue on the payroll under an assignment of invention rights annexed to, but not executed with, the 1909 agreement. A cash consideration was not made explicit. This arrangement endured until 1917, when the Remington Arms Co. "lured" Mr. Fuller away by an offer of more salary and a longheaded, foreseeing proposition of a share in profits on any cash registers he might devise for his new company and they might market.* At that time the Remington people were beyond their necks in War work. Mr. Fuller, always the inventor, immediately improved some of their...
...Gubelman invented and applied for a patent on an adding counter which printed totals. This could be made an integral part of cash registers or adding machines, such as the Burroughs, the Elliott-Fisher, the Sundstrand. He offered his patent rights on a royalty basis to N. C. R. They had also filed on a similar patent, refused his offer. To Remington he went. They sent him back to N. C. R. Refusal again. So Remington adopted the device as an integral part of their registers : filed suit jointly with him against N. C. R. for infringement; won as owners...