Peter Weir | Bob Weir | Gillian Weir | weir | John Weir | J. Alden Weir | Doddie Weir | Alison Weir | Christina Weir | Stuart Weir | Nick Weir | Mark Weir | John Weir Troy | John Weir (loyalist) | Johnny Weir | Harvey Weir Cook | Fishing weir | Bridge of Weir | Benjamin Weir | William Gilbert Weir | Weir River | Weir Farm National Historic Site | Wally Weir | Thomas Weir | Stuart Weir (UK journalist) | Stephen Weir | Robert Weir (athlete) | Robert Weir | Robert Stanley Weir | Mundaring Weir Branch Railway |
He was well known in the 1930s for opposing President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal program, for resisting union organizing drives by the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers and its successor, the United Steelworkers, and for challenging the legal authority of the National Labor Relations Board.
He was an heir to the fortune of the furniture firm of W. and J. Sloane & Co.
Bobby sets out walking, trying to gather his thoughts after his grandfather and father just had a heated argument, and crosses paths with former president of the United States, Jimmy Carter, a frequent Habitat for Humanity volunteer.
Ms. Jeri Johnson, senior tutor in English at Exeter College, Oxford, spoke as an expert witness in literature for the plaintiffs, decrying Vander Ark's work as unscholarly, and claiming that there was enough material in Rowling's world for serious academic analysis.
He attended Allan Glen's School and the High School of Glasgow before entering an apprenticeship in the business established by his father and his uncle, G. and J. Weir, manufacturers of condensers, pumps, and evaporators.