Word: donham
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...have to speak fast to keep up with the new deal. Consider the case of Dean Donham of the Harvard Business School. He is supposed to have received a letter from General Johnson offering him indirectly the job directing the N. R. A. planning and research division. He failed to answer it for a few days and then wrote Johnson a letter saying he would drop down to Washington for a talk...
Stocky, philosophical Dean Wallace Brett Donham, 56, has linked his Graduate School of Business Administration firmly with big business, made it the best of its kind in the U. S. But with big business no longer so popular as it was, scholarly Harvard is debating whether it should ever have entered the business school field. Enrollment this year is down to 811 from last year's 960, the previous year's 1,102. But over 90% of last year's class are employed...
...Secretary of the Treasury, O. M. W. Sprague, Edmund Cogswell Converse Professor of Banking and Finance, arrived in Boston late last evening, it was revealed early today, and is understood to have gone direct to the Business School, spending the night at the home of Wallace B. Donham '99, Dean of the School. He left New York early in the afternoon, it is believed, coming up on the train with Walter Lippmann '10, who spoke to a small gathering at Kirkland House last night. Lippmann, who spent the early part of the evening with Edward a. Whitney '17, Master...
William B. Donham, dean of the Business School, has definitely stated that he is opposed to the exploitation of the Business School parking facilities for use by members of the University as a whole. He is quoted as stating that he does not care to have numerous automobiles driving in and about the Business School at all hours of the day and night. This blocks the best opportunity the men in the College would have in possibly acquiring parking facilities maintained by University Hall...
Harvard contributes the two leading articles in the "Atlantic Monthly" for October. W. Y. Elliott, head of the Department of Government, "a twentieth century son of the nineteenth century Liberals," points out in "This Economic Nationalism," that Dean Donham and J. M. Keynes have overlooked the drastic political and social results of the policy of isolation that they have been so strongly advocating. He warns us that we are headed for more unemployment if we attempt economic isolation without submitting to dictatorial methods. Because of Congressional "meddling" the economic nationalism of the past twelve years has led us to desire...