Word: gone
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...school erects the specialized training which equips the man for his profession. Whether and to what professional school a man should go depends, therefore, entirely on the profession he elects to practice. If he chooses to practice law, a law school training is absolutely essential. The time has long gone by when the successful lawyer began his legal career as an apprentice in a law office. A law school degree is now a prerequisite to admission into any reputable law office. The law school is, therefore, essentially for the man who intends to practice law, and in no sense...
...hold degrees from the Graduate School, the larger number have gone into teaching, chiefly in colleges and universities, many of them directing the most advanced study and research of other graduate schools. Some, like Senator Lodge and Secretary Houston, and the Honorable Mackenzie King, recently Minister of Labor in Canada, have gone into public service, whether in the general work of politics and administration or in scientific or statistical work of a more specialized type. Others have gone into industry as consulting chemists and geologists, or into the newer fields of industrial research. Still others will be found in literary...
Besides this fact, there is also the consideration that the money which was turned over to the government was drawn in most cases from funds which would otherwise have gone to promote the expansion of trade and industries. Such a consequence is unavoidable when the government's revenues are drawn from only a few sources. The investment funds of the country cannot be allowed to disappear into the Treasury year after year without ultimately harmful effects upon the stability of business and of the government itself...
...under an assumed name in three steel mills, two coal mines, two shipyards, an oil refinery, and a railway roundhouse. During this period he kept an interesting diary which has since been published by Scribner's under the title of "What is on the Worker's Mind," and has gone into the second edition. In the summer of 1920, Mr. Williams spent three months working in the coal mines of New South Wales and trying to get jobs as a man out of work in the steel slants, docks, and shipyards of England, Scotland and Wales. He has been lecturing...
...receipts exceedingly small, the loss was $30,208.10. In 1915-1916, the last normal year, the loss was only $368.35. The loss last year, $6000 greater than that of 1915-1916, is, as expected, due both to the fact that prices of necessary materials and wages had gone up out of all proportion to the prices charged for tickets, and that as a great deal of material was given away during the war to service elevens, a large amount of new supplies had to be purchased...