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...Recovery Program" to Harvard's already well nourished reputation as a home for die-hard academicians schooled in the embalmed jingo of a dead era, it was not Professor Taussig nor Professors Carver nor Burbank nor any other of the great Civil War school, but a new-comer, Joseph Alois Schumpeter, J.U.D., ex-finance minister of Austria, internationally known economic theorist, and no fool, who showed his hand...

Author: By Joseph ALOIS Schumpeter, PROFESSOR OF ECONOMICS | Title: Portraits of Harvard Figures | 3/1/1934 | See Source »

...stop hostilities if necessary by organizing a general strike (TIME, Oct. 16). In all recent British by-elections Labor candidates have drawn their loudest cheers by restating variations of this anti-war pledge and Sir Stafford loomed last week as easily the Party's most promising comer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Sweep to Labor | 11/13/1933 | See Source »

Ecker and Ford will be remembered as the flashy pair that ran wild over opposition when they worked together on the Belmont High outfit last year. Biledean was a star of the Fxeter eleven last fall and looks like a comer in the fallback position. Charles W. Kessley, leader of the Salem High team of a year age, is holding down the left guard niche...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMAN GRIDSTERS TO WORK TOWARD ANDOVER | 10/3/1933 | See Source »

...could forgive Whitney if we could forget the West Point and the Brown games of last year, but Allie Sherman seems to be a real comer. He is fast, heavy enough and heady enough and ought to make the grade. Barrett? He's a question mark. He's been up in team A during the last week but our memories are strained in trying to remember what he did last year...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lining Them Up | 9/27/1933 | See Source »

...Spiller, producers). Here is a play sure in its unpretentious telling of a wholesome, sometimes humorous, sometimes moving story. A frieze of homely figures on a Mid-western ground, One Sunday Afternoon opens in the shabby dental parlor of Biff Grimes. D. D. S. (Lloyd Nolan, an able new-comer). Stimulated by an old crony, a bottle of rye and innumerable repetitions of "in the good old summer time." Biff's imagination reaches sadly back to his youth in another little town. Nostalgia gives way to intemperate anger when he thinks of the injustices he received at the hands...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theatre: New Plays in Manhattan: Feb. 27, 1933 | 2/27/1933 | See Source »

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