Word: pye
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Brown argued to the NLRB that its case differed from NYU’s because the school requires its graduate students to teach as part of their degree requirements, but NLRB Region One (New England) Director Rosemary Pye was unconvinced...
...find, first, that Brown has failed to demonstrate that most teaching assistantships at Brown are undertaken in order to fulfill a degree requirement,” Pye said in his decision. “Even if Brown had demonstrated that most graduate students teach as a degree requirement, however, I disagree with its contention that the Board in NYU meant to imply that if the work in question also fulfills a degree requirement, the students necessarily lost their status as employees...
...bittersweet nightshade, heal-all, true forget-me-not, blue vervain, spring larkspur, spiderwort, monkeyflower, dog violet, common butterwort, spurred butterfly, crown vetch, henbit, spotted Joe-Pye weed, gray beardtongue, spreading dogbane, live forever, steeplebush, crazyweed, woolly locoweed, hairy vetch, lady's thumb, common speedwell, field milkwort, Lyon's turtlehead, ragged robin, calypso, common burdock, spotted knapweed, hairy willow herb, purple saxifrage, red baneberry, slender glasswort, toadshade, climbing bittersweet, birdsfoot trefoil, moth mullein, smooth false foxglove, showy rattlebox, prince's plume, agrimony, squawroot, mouse-ear hawkweed, rattlesnake weed, coltsfoot, tickseed sunflower, Jerusalem artichoke, sneezeweed, swollen bladderwort, clammy ground cherry, purslane, muskflower...
...regard to the allegation that the employer violated the workers rights by "sponsoring, encouraging and participating in acts of violence against strikers, the investigation did not reveal unlawful conduct on the part of the employer," Rosemary Pye, Regional Director the National Labor Relations Board, wrote in a letter to Gabriel Dumont, a Cardinal attorney...
...while the economy did manage gains of 1.4% in the second quarter and 1.8% in the third, few experts doubt that the U.S. has become mired in a double-dip slump that for all practical purposes never really ended. "Everything was set for a typical recovery," says economist Gordon Pye, who runs his own New York City consulting firm. "But when employment did not increase and the waves of layoffs and restructurings continued, that really inhibited...