Word: stefani
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Instead of bucking the chef, waitress, and pastry-cook unions at every turn, Harvard has co-operated with their representatives, winning Joe Stefani's applause as a "good" employer. The result is that the University labor picture is a peaceful one, while union members have gained more humane conditions...
...Harvard and M.I.T. are the only two employers that play ball one hundred per cent with our union," Joseph Stefani, secretary-treasurer of the Cooks' and Pastry Cooks' Union, said yesterday...
...They're all willing to join up when we offer them four dollars a week more pay, uniforms free and laundered by the University, a $50 sick benefit, and $150 to their families in case of death," explained Stefani. "Then, in a little while, they begin to backslide on their $1.50-a-month duce. Till this month, the union had no method of forcing them...
Tomorrow night at 8 o'clock in Emerson Hall D, the Harvard Committee Against Military Intervention presents Clive Knowles, the field representative of Labor's Non-Partisan League (C.I.O) and Joseph Stefani, the financial secretary and business agent of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees Local No. 186 (A.F.L.), both of whom will talk on "Labor Speaks for Peace...
Ominous to Greek ears was another Italian sound-effect they heard that evening - from Mussolini's news agency, Stefani: news that there had been a "border incident" that day near the Corizza Pass on the Greek-Albanian border, and a bomb incident at Porto Edda (named for Il Duce's daughter). The Italians, of course, blamed Greek "armed bands" and agents. Denial of the affairs by the Greeks went unheard, their offers of discussion were turned down. Within a few hours Mussolini and Hitler had one more conference, at Florence (see p. 28), and Italy...