Word: patterson
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Gregg Lois Williams, ErskineArthur Gutterman Judith Weisberg, Julia RichmondAlbert C. Kelly Midge Wolfe, WellesleyThorn Kissel, Jr. Barbara Case, VassarJohn W. Klages Marjorie Davidson, SmithRobert A. Koch Muriel MacChesney, VassarDaniel K. Levin Phyllis Duskin, New York, N. Y.Leonard Levin Betty Ziff. Greensburg, PennArthur Maling Paula Berwald, WellesleyStuart McCarty Jane Patterson, ErskineHugo Monnig Elizabeth Stockstroom, BenningtonGrover O'Neill Mary Taylor, Sarah LawrenceMurray Pendleton Barbara Birch, ArlingtonDonald Pitkin Edith Hall, WinsorHarold Rosenblum Carol Flarsheim, Brookline, Mass.Russell A. Sibley Virginia Marston, WinsorRobert H. Smith Elsa Walker, ErskineHarold C. Tint Elaine Schulman, Dwight SchoolEdward M. Townsend Mary Lee Longscope, RadcliffeHenry A. Walker Jean Fellows, SwampscottAndrew...
...Fair Labor Standards Act. But Mr. Eichenlaub replied that the hospital was short of funds. Climax of the strike came when he tried to obtain an injunction against picketing. The municipal judge to whom the case was referred lay sick in bed in the struck hospital. Judge Frank Plunkett Patterson substituted for him, issued an order which Pittsburgh papers called "the most drastic picketing injunction of modern times...
Although West Penn is a voluntary (private) hospital, it receives about $75,000 a year (8% of its income) from the State. Judge Patterson ruled that the hospital was part of the State Government, restrained the union from picketing, writing letters, distributing pamphlets, publishing advertisements, uttering "epithets, jeers . . . taunts...
...days later Judge Patterson relented a little, allowed the pickets to march up & down within certain limits. Meanwhile, dietitians, doctors and nurses did the hospital's dirty work. Since unionized commercial laundries refused to do the hospital's wash, one doctor took home a heap of dirty diapers for his wife...
GOOD NIGHT, SHERIFF-Harrison R. Sfeeves-Random House ($2). Dr. Patterson, insurance-company investigator, goes to the log and deer country where Agnes Earlie, wife of a local doctor, has been shot with a high-power, steel-jacketed rifle bullet. Finding no motive in $20,000 insurance, Patterson becomes Dr. Earlie's guest, quietly garners enough circumstantial evidence to convict the Doctor or any one of several people who loved and respected Mrs. Earlie. A first-rate story, it is short on blood, long on plot and psychology...