Word: wilson
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...terms: all employes would register for work. Those not rehired would be told why and if dissatisfied with the reasons, could appeal to a new personnel director, E. T. Wilson, in whom the work ers had high confidence. Strikers, as such, would not be discriminated against. The management would meet an employes' committee to adjust grievances. But Dr. Mothwurf, as is usual in such cases, was emphatic on one point. Said he : "I will deal only with former employes as such and not with the Union as a Union...
...from which grew a harvest of lasting football fame. Rushers Heffelfinger and Morison, though, had helpful teammates: John Augustus Hartwell (now a famed Manhattan surgeon) in the line; Thomas Lee McClung (onetime [1909-1912] Treasurer of the U. S.) and Vance Criswell McCormick (Democratic National Committee Chair-man in Wilson's 1916 campaign) in the backfield. And on the substitutes' bench sat Thomas Cochran (Morgan partner and Director of General Electric) and Ralph Delahay Paine (author of College Years, The Head Coach, The Stroke Oar, Campus Days...
...Latin 15 Sever 18 Mathematics A III Sever 18 Palaeontology 3 Zool. Lab. 17 Philosophy 9d Emerson F Psychology 5 Bloomberg-Sandstrom Emerson A Schafer-Winn Emerson F Semitic 8 Sever 18 Slavic 5 Sever 24 Social Ethics 3 Emerson F Zoology 6b Adams-Jordan Sever 5 Kilham-Wilson Sever 6 2 o'clock Chinese 24 Widener 771 Engin. Sciences 3b Robinson Hall French 29 Sever 5 Government 15 Sever 5 History 38 Sever 6 Music 1b Music Bldg. Philosophy 27 Emerson A Physiology 4 Sever 6 Psychology 10 Emerson A Social Ethics 29 Emerson...
...Committee includes Professor G. G. Wilson, chairman; Dean G. H. Chase, A. S. Johnson '85, George Wigglesworth '74, Dean W. L. Sperry, R. H. Holt '11, James Roosevelt Jr. '30, and C. G. Chase...
...true. Mr. Smith was inside, sitting on the right of Professor Felix Frankfurter, famed Harvard Law School liberal and Sacco-Vanzetti defender. Close by sat Professor Francis B. Sayre, Woodrow Wilson's son-in-law. Mr. Smith talked for two hours on Water Power, municipal v. private operation, from his long experience of it in New York. Utmost secrecy attended the dinner. Newsgatherers, as such, are never allowed in the Union Club. Nevertheless, when Mr. Smith found the Press was present, he said: "You've got to give the boys the news...