Word: chiefed
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Bradford Keyser Bachrach '33, of West Newton, Massachusetts, was appointed editor-in-chief of the Freshman Red Book last night at a meeting of the temporary executive council on Freshman affairs headed by S.L. Batchelder...
...chief criticism of the attitude of operators in American industry is that concurrent with the willingness to discard all but the latest machinery there is an equal readiness to cast off human machinery when its efficiency becomes impaired. In developing his discussion of this aspect of American industry he made a few observations on the subject of unemployment. He explained that, up to the present time, the expansion of industry and the mobility of labor, which follows demand, have served to prevent unemployment from growing into a national problem such as it is in England. Though reliable governmental statistics relative...
Sixth, the chief argument of the west is based on the word "can't." "Prohibition can't be enforced" is their chief stock in trade. If, even in its present state of partial enforcement, it is better that what it displaced, why not say frankly that it has done a great deal of good, but hadn't accomplished all that was expected of it. If that is not true, why are the wets so vociferous in proclaiming that they do not want the saloon back? If it is true, why not admit it frankly and then see what is next...
John Franklin Ebersole, A.M. '09, at present economic advisor and chief of the section of Financial and Economic Research in the Treasury Department, is coming to Cambridge in January to lecture throughout the next half year at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, it was announced at University Hall. He will told the position of Professor of Finance...
...voted in the Senior elections held last Wednesday. Granted that the present generation at Harvard has putgrown any yearning for strenuous political activity, there has nevertheless existed, even in recent year, much more interest in the choosing of class-officers than was manifested by the Class of 1930. The chief reason for the slight vote is rather to be found in the range of polling places and of time for voting. There are two alternatives either of which would increase the vote appreciably: the use of post-card ballots, or the extension of voting hours and the pumlier of polling...