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Fourth Circuit rejects predominance arguments and affirms certification of class asserting breach of contract and unconscionable inducement claims. Fifth Circuit rejects conditional certification process in FLSA collective actions, articulating a new standard to make final certification decisions before allowing cases to proceed.
Jan 23, 2021
Alva H. Roice, age 85, of Broadalbin, passed away on Wednesday, January 20, 2021, at St. Mary’s Hospital, Amsterdam.
He was born on July 19, 1935, in Amsterdam, to the late Henry Roice and Josephine Marnelli Roice.
Alva was a graduate of Wilbur H. Lynch High School in Amsterdam and honorably served his country in the Army National Guard as a Sergeant for five years. He was first employed as a Draftsman from 1953 to 1958 at General Electric in Schenectady. Mr. Roice later worked for over 33 years at General Telephone Company as a Service Supervisor and Coordinator, retiring in 1991. Alva was of the Catholic faith. He served on the Vacancy Committee of the 5th Ward in Gloversville. Mr. Roice was a member of the St. Patrick’s Lodge 4 F&AM in Johnstown, Gloversville Elks Lodge, the Sacandaga Boating Club, Concordia Singing Society, Tribes Hill Fish & Game Club, Pine Tree Rifle Club, Fish House Fish & Game Club, the Great Sacandaga Lake Fisheries Federation and the Gre
Madison in the Sixties – In Memoriam, part 2 – business leaders
Madison native Thomas E. Brittingham Jr., son of the great lumberman/philanthropist, and a founding trustee of the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, suffers a fatal heart attack at age sixty- one while driving near his home in Wilmington, Delaware, on April 16, 1960. A member of the campus Ku Klux Klan interfraternity in the early 1920s, Brittingham became president of the Research Foundation in 1955 and oversaw its successful investment strategy.
Two leading businessmen take their own lives in 1961 one due to failure, the other to success.
Frederick J. Meyer, fifty- one, founder and president of Red Dot Foods, owned plants in eight cities and thirty- five thousand retail outlets in twelve Midwestern states. On May 5, he merges his company with H. W. Lay & Co. Although continues as president of Red Dot and become vice president and a director of the Lay company, Meyer is despondent over the loss of owners