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  1. In 1915 the college was officially recognised by the Trades Union Congress, and in 1921 it became the centre of the National Council of Labour Colleges, a national network of colleges.The CLC closed in 1929 when financial support from the SWMF was no longer available. Reference: W.W. Craik, 'The Central Labour College 1909-29' (London, 1964).

  2. B. Baltimore Labor College. Brookwood Labor College. Bryn Mawr Summer School for Women Workers in Industry.

  3. Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC), established by ESI Act, is an autonomous corporation under Ministry of Labour and Employment, Government of India. As it is a legal entity, the corporation can raise loans and take measures for discharging such loans with the prior sanction of the central government and it can acquire both movable ...

  4. Website. www.laboure.edu. Labouré College of Healthcare is a private college specializing in nursing and healthcare education and located in Milton, Massachusetts. Founded in 1892, by the Daughters of Charity, it is the longest-running nursing education program in the Boston area. The college offers online and on-campus certificate, associate ...

  5. The Central Labour Service (CLS) cadre is an Organized Group 'A' Central Civil Services of the Government of India. It was formed in February 1987 by amalgamating 3 bodies: Labour Officers (Central Pool), Central Industrial Relations Machinery and Welfare Organisation of the Ministry of Labour. [1] Its main roles are to implement labour and ...

  6. From 1914 to 1925, Beaumont was a member of Derbyshire County Council. He began fighting Parliamentary seats at Aldershot in the 1924 general election, and Harrow in the 1929 general election. In the 1931 general election he was chosen for the Labour-held seat of Peckham where the sitting MP John Beckett had split from the Labour Party.

  7. He joined the Independent Labour Party in 1915 and through his membership came into contact with the No Conscription Fellowship; he refused to join the armed forces and consequently he was imprisoned in 1917. He attended the Central Labour College in London in 1919 where his fellow students included Aneurin Bevan and James Griffiths .