Word: unionization
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Dynamic A. J. ("Emperor") Cook, who lately clasped hands with Edward of Wales, announced himself a Socialist now and no longer a Communist, and was forthwith rebuked by a scathing resolution of the Communist Party (TIME, April 29), last week roared at a union meeting of Welsh miners : "I have fought as no one else has fought to protect the Communists! I have been reviled for it. I have fed them and clothed them−and I say now they are the most dishonorable set of men I have ever had dealings with...
Long has the radical cried for "One Big Union," for all the Workers to be gathered together in one all-inclusive organization. Thus far, however, One Big Union for the workers has been a soap-bubble blown from the soapbox. Indeed, it is the Radical's enemy, the Capitalist, who has recently been unifying, and to an extraordinary degree. Fewer and bigger banks? fewer and bigger department stores? fewer and bigger soaps?it is in an Age of Merger that Industry lives today. The One Big Union may eventually arrive. But the One Big Business appears more definitely...
...definitely announced in the jewelry field. Last March Manhattan's Black, Starr & Frost and Gorham Co. bought themselves a corporate wedding ring and decided to go down the path of business life together. Last week, however, this matrimonial metaphor became somewhat mixed when Spaulding & Co., Inc., joined the union. A holding company?Gorham, Inc.?was formed to handle the joint affairs of the three companies, each of which continued to operate its own establishment. Said Edmund C. Mayo, head of Gorham, Inc.: "U. S. prosperity has brought about a steady increase in the demand for fine jewelry...
Cornell covered the course in 9 minutes, 27 and 3-5, seconds, with Tech trailing in 9:40 and 3-5, and Harvard in 9:45 and 2-5. At the finish the shells were practically awash but all reached to Union Boat Club float before sinking...
Under changed conditions of University life debating has necessarily lost much of its former prestige. With the passing of the Debating Union it is clear that undergraduate interest in debating has grown noticably weaker. While debating at Harvard must content itself with a limited field, it is all the more desirable that good management make the most of the remaining opportunities...