Word: senter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...that they should disband. Aligned with the Mayor was Dr. Arthur Alan Mitten, 47-year-old son of the late Thomas Eugene Mitten, who managed P. R. T. from 1911 until his death in 1929. Opposed to them was P. R. T.'s President Ralph Townsend ("Rapid Transit") Senter, who thought that the trustees had done a good job, should be continued in office. Since P. R. T. was before Federal Judge George A. Welsh on an application for 77-6 reorganization, the Court remained the final authority on the direction of P. R. T.'s perplexed affairs...
...have to drink water," cried a wit in the audience. "Take a nip out of that bottle Senter's got in his pocket." President Senter rose, slapped his pockets to demonstrate that no bottles were on his person...
...Senter had a bottle," went on the Mayor, magnanimously, "it would be for medicine. Mr. Senter is a sick...
Next speaker was Mr. Senter, who seemed most disturbed over the circumstance that the P. R. T. Co-operative System had been, as he said, "put on the spot." This system provided, among other items, that employes should have a voice in the company's affairs. But the voice was to be expressed through duly elected employe representatives. For the employes to go over the heads of these representatives to hold mass meetings and cast secret ballots, was a resounding slap at Cooperation. "I believe in the Cooperative System," said Mr. Senter solemnly, "as much...
...names of the men who received degrees with distinction follow: Robert Gorham Davis of Cambridge, and Hyman Alpers of Salem, A.B. cum laude; Warren Wilcox Anthony of Portsmouth, R. I., and Shephard Sterling Senter of Windham, N. H., S.B. cum laude. Five more A.B. degrees were given this year than last, but 14 less than...