Word: baker
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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There is no use trying to get sympathy for your business worries from a soft coal man. Trouble is all he has had for the past twelve years. "To bring about the economic coordination of the coal industry," 1,000 men of science (like President Thomas Stockham Baker of Carnegie Institute of Technology) and men of industry (like Utilitarian Samuel Insull and Steelman James A. Farrell) met at Pittsburgh last week. Assembled at Carnegie Tech, the meeting was called the Third International Conference on Bituminous Coal...
...passageway connecting the western and central stairways in Baker Library on the second floor will soon provide an uncongested passage for men going or coming from upper floor classes. A partition wall cutting off the northern end of some little-used offices is being constructed to make this hallway come between the south side of the main reading room and the offices. According to Assistant Dean Esty Foster '21, this hall will not only lesson congestion on the western stairway by providing two routes for students going to and from upper floor classes, but will also make the reading room...
...faculty line-up: Snider, Baker, Lorner, Streibert, Sayles, Foster, Tebbutt, Cole, Hosmer...
...More likely, he would wear down the New York Governor's strength until that gentleman was ready to send his managers into a midnight hotel room conference with full authority to deal & dicker for support. If Governor Roosevelt declined to bargain, his foes might bring forward Newton Diehl Baker, spared all the animosities of a Ritchie v. Roosevelt tussle, as the dark horse on whose nomination all could compromise...
Publication of the Weekly Letters of the Harvard Economic Society will be discontinued at the end of December, according to information contained in a letter to members and subscribers, given out Saturday by C. J. Bullock, George F. Baker Professor of Economics and President of the Society. This action has been taken as a result of financial pressure but will not affect the publication of the Society's quarterly magazine, the Review of Economic Statistics, to which will now be added monthly supplements in the eight months when the regular numbers do not appear...