15 research outputs found
How Boston solved the gas problem /
Extracted from The American review of reviews, vol. 36, no. 5, November, 1907.Caption title.Mode of access: Internet
Massachusetts's substitute for old age pensions /
Extracted from The Independent, vol. 65, no. 3111, July 16, 1908..Caption title.Mode of access: Internet
The greatest life insurance wrong /
Extracted from The Independent, vol. 61, no. 3029, Dec. 20, 1906.Caption title.Mode of access: Internet
Other people's money, and how the bankers use it,
Mode of access: Internet
Business--a profession /
Reprinted in part from various periodicals.Brandeis, by E. Poole.--Business--a profession.--The employer and trades unions.--Hours of labor.--Organized labor and efficiency.--The road to social efficiency.--Our new peonage: discretionary pensions.--The incorporation of trades unions.--How Boston solved the gas problem.--Life insurance: the abuses and the remedies.--Savings bank insurance.--Successes of savings bank life insurance.--Trusts and efficiency.--Trusts and the export trade.--Competition that kills.--The New England transportation monopoly.--The New Haven--an unregulated monopoly.--An aid to railroad efficiency.--The opportunity in the law.Mode of access: Internet
Fatigue and efficiency; a study in industry,
Mode of access: Internet
The case for the shorter work day. Franklin O. Bunting, plaintiff in error, vs. The state of Oregon, defendant in error. Brief for defendant in error. Felix Frankfurter, of counsel for the State of Oregon. Assisted by Josephine Goldmark.
"Appendix: Hours of labor and realism in constitutional law, by Felix Frankfurter <Reprinted from the Harvard law review, vol.xxix, no.4>": p. [961]-984."Parts first and second of this brief were prepared under the direction of Mr. Louis D. Brandeis."-- Introductory note.U.S. Supreme Court, October term, 1915, no.288.Cover title."List of sources quoted": p.985-1021.Mode of access: Internet
Lee Kaufer Frankel collection, undated, 1889-1933, 1936-1938, 1942-1944.
The collection contains correspondence, documents, and newspaper clippings relating to the life and activities of Frankel in the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company as well as in other social welfare Jewish organizations. Includes biographic and bibliographic data, as well as manuscript and printed copies of his writings and speeches on the subjects of health, insurance and Jewish affairs, and miscellaneous personal correspondence especially with Milton Rosenau.Donated by Brandeis University (Goldfarb Library),Dr. Lee Kaufer Frankel was born in Philadelphia on August 13, 1867, the son of Louis and Aurelia Lobenburg Franken. He attended public schools as the Rugby Academy of Pennsylvania and the University of Pennsylvania. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 1887 with a B.S. and again in 1891, when he received a Ph.D. He specialized in chemistry and was an instructor in chemistry at the university from 1888 until 1893. He practiced as a consulting chemist in Philadelphia from 1893 to 1899, and was vice president and then president of the chemical section of the Franklin Institute between 1895 and 1898. He came to New York in 1899 as manager of the United Hebrew Charities. A year earlier, he married Alice Reizenstein of Philadelphia and they had two children, Lee K. Frankel Jr. and Eleanor Frankel (Mrs. Richard Rafalsky). In 1908 he went to the Russell Sage Foundation as a special investigator. Frankel's friendship with Rabbi Henry Berkowitz helped arouse his interest in Jewish community affairs and social work.Finding Aid available in Reading Room and on Internet.Lee Kaufer Frankelfar031
Louis Brandeis collection undated, 1886-1940, 1966
Contains thirteen letters, on a variety of subjects. Of most interest are a letter written to Walter Lippmann, referring to a talk with Felix Frankfurter regarding Brandeis' confirmation as a justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1916), and a letter to Abraham H. Sakier regarding Brandeis' desire not to have his name connected with any fund-raising project for a university in Palestine (1930)Also included are manuscript letters to Clifton Fadiman (1937), and David Ben-Gurion (1940). Also 4 items of "ephemera" re: Louis D. BrandeisGifts, in part, of the Elsie O. & Philip D. Sang Foundatio