schneiderman in A Sentence

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    Herbert Lehman Schneiderman.

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    Schneiderman believed in building a movement of men and women workers to change society.

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    In 1908, German Jewish philanthropist Irene Lewisohn offered Schneiderman money to finish her schooling.

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    Only 4 feet, 9 inches tall, with flaming red hair, Schneiderman was a mesmerizing orator.

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    In 1908, Irene Lewisohn, a German Jewish philanthropist, offered Schneiderman money to complete her education.

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    Born in Poland, Schneiderman came to New York City with her Orthodox Jewish family in 1890.

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    Schneiderman was regularly invited to Hyde Park to spend time with Roosevelt and her husband, Franklin D. Roosevelt.

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    Rose Schneiderman, third from the right, at a Leaders of the National Women's Trade Unions session with other members.

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    Eric Schneiderman said the largest number of complaints concerned increased fuel prices, but other emergency supplies were also affected.

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    Schneiderman refused the scholarship, explaining that she could not accept a privilege that was not available to most working women.

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    In a statement, Schneiderman said,“In the last few hours, there are many serious allegations against me that I strongly reject.”.

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    Every year, thousands of us are maimed,” Schneiderman said to a mixed audience of workers and the city's wealthy and middle-class reformers.

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    The fourth woman told that when she refused to obey Schneiderman, Schneiderman slapped her, although this woman had also refused to disclose her identity.

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    Schneiderman retired as WTUL president in 1950 and died in 1972, just as the second wave of feminism was emerging as a powerful political movement.

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    Even though Schneiderman is a New York official, Glasner says, this investigation will have larger implications because these dietary supplements are sold all over the country.

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    One of Schneiderman's closest allies was Eleanor Roosevelt, who joined the WTUL in 1922, coming into contact with working-class women and radical activists for the first time.

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    By 1903, at age 21, Schneiderman had organized her first union shop, the Jewish Socialist United Cloth Hat and Cap Makers' Union and had led a successful strike.

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    Schneiderman joined the struggle for women's suffrage, a cause that many male union leaders- and even some female unionists- thought was secondary to the battle for workers rights.

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    Schneiderman's organizing efforts among immigrants paved the way for a strike of 20,000 garment workers in 1909 and 1910, the largest by American women workers up to that time.

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    Schneiderman said,"Any sale of The Weinstein Company must ensure that victims will be compensated, employees will be protected going forward, and that neither perpetrators nor enablers will be unjustly enriched.".

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    The WTUL's upper-class women- whom Schneiderman called the“mink brigade”- raised money for the workers strike fund, lawyers, and bail money, and they even joined the union members on picket lines.

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    Schneiderman said in a statement,"Any sale of The Weinstein Company must ensure that victims will be compensated, employees will be protected going forward, and that neither perpetrators nor enablers will be unjustly enriched.

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    As New York state's secretary of labor from 1937 to 1943, appointed by Gov. Herbert Lehman, Schneiderman campaigned for the extension of Social Security to domestic workers, for equal pay for women workers, and for comparable worth(giving women and men equal pay for different jobs that have comparable value).

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    As New York state's secretary of labor from 1937 to 1943, appointed by Governor Herbert Lehman, Schneiderman campaigned for the extension of Social Security to domestic workers, for equal pay for women workers, and for comparable worth(giving women and men equal pay for different jobs that have comparable value).

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