Various plans for preventing strikes in public utilities will be examined by Archibald Cox '34, professor of Labor Law at the Law School, before the fourth meeting of the University chapter of the Republican Open Forum tonight at 8 o'clock in the Winthrop House Junior Common Room.
The topic of the evening was chosen by the central committee of the nation wide Republican Open Forum, organized by the Stassen wing of the Republican Party, for discussion in all the local branches during the month of January.
To Vote on Subject
Ballots will be distributed at the end of the meeting permitting every one attending to register his views on certain aspects of the subject. These ballots will be forwarded to the national headquarters of the forum to be tabulated along with those submitted by the other chapters. The findings will then be made available to Republican congressmen and senators.
Prior to his University appointment in October 1945. Professor Cox served on the National Defense Mediation Board and as Assistant Solicitor of the federal Department of Labor. A member of the Law Review while a student at the Law School, at one time he represented the University in cases involving textile mills owned by the Corporation.
Read more in News
Wrestling Squads Hit Hardest Tests Early This TermRecommended Articles
-
COLLEGE MEN SHOULD STUDY UNEMPLOYMENT PROBLEMS SAYS GREENWilliam Green, president of the American Federation of Labor, which is now convening in Boston at the Hotel Bradford, in
-
RACE OF GRADED EIGHTSThe four graded club crews from which the University crew squad is to be picked will race down stream over
-
Cox, Dunlop, Golden Assert Pending Bills, Would Increase Labor UnrestMembers of the Liberal Union heard current labor legislation damned as "partisan politics of the worst order" and as a
-
Union Asks Conant Choose N.Y. Harvard Club ArbitersNEW YORK, April 9 Locked-out Harvard Club employees here asked today that President Conant choose or sit on as arbitration
-
Cox to Lecture on LawArchibald Cox '34, of Wayland, has been appointed visiting lecturer in Law for one year, Dean James M. Landis of