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Box 37

 Container

Contains 40 Results:

Newspaper Clippings, 1936-41

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 1
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: 1936-41

Report on Newspaper Publicity, 1936

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 2
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: 1936

"Liberalism and Equality," John Dewey, The Social Frontier, A Journal of Educational Criticism and Reconstruction, 2, 1936

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 3
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: 1936

The Works Progress Administration's Nation-wide Staff Meeting of the Air, June 20, 1936

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 4
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: June 20, 1936

"Press Digest," mimeograph, May 22, 1936

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 5
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: May 22, 1936

Excerpt from "The Letters of Mr. X," Collier's, (typescript); "Mormon 'Security,'" Martha Emery, The Nation, February 5, 1938; February 12, 1938

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 6
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: February 5, 1938; February 12, 1938

"Young and Old Look for Work," Corrington Gill, American Federationist; "Plus Signs of the Depression," Chester S. Williams, Journal of Adult Education, June 1938; October 1938

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 7
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: June 1938; October 1938

"The Paradox of the W.P.A.," Dean R. Brimhall, Common Sense, September 1938

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 8
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: September 1938

"Corrington Gill Calls 'War-Trade Cure for Unemployment' Fantastic and Absurd," WPA Press Release, mimeograph; "The Economics of the Family," typescript, November 1939; 1939

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 9
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: November 1939; 1939

"The Human Factor in the W.P.A.," Christian Century, July 26, 1939; Report of New Citizens Day Ceremonies Held in 1939," United States Department of Labor, Immigration and Naturalization Service, Washington, D.C., 1940

 File — Box: 37, Folder: 10
Identifier: VI
Scope and Contents From the Series: In 1935 Dean Brimhall accepted a position with the Works Progress Administration as an advisor for labor relations. He served until 1939 under WPA administrator Harry L. Hopkins. During this time Brimhall was an outspoken defender of the Roosevelt administration and of the Works Progress Administration. He gave many speeches and always fought for the workers' rights.
Dates: 1940