Word: lowenstein
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Every year more students of government are becoming interested in preparing for public service as a career. Facilities must be provided to take care of their training. If the Lowenstein Fellowship proves worthwhile similar fellowships must be instituted to encourage men of ability to enter the civil service. In line with this movement eventually must come the creation of a graduate school of Public Service. Harvard would do well to establish such a worthy precedent...
Robert W. Frase, of Madison, Wis., senior at the University of Wisconsin and an honor student in economics, has been chosen as the first recipient of the $1,200 M. Fred Lowenstein Fellowship, giving him one year of graduate study at Harvard and an additional year of practical field work in preparation for a life of public service. He is interested in the relation of economics to government...
...fellowship, an unusual experiment in American education, was established this spring by an anonymous donor in memory of M. Fred Lowenstein '32. The trustees are Carl J. Friedrich and Rupert Emerson, associate and assistant professor of government, and Paul M. Herzog, former tutor in government and now a member of the national labor board in Washington...
Luckily Alexander still had his collection of antique coins; he sold them. His wife Xenia sold her pearls. The late notorious Alfred Lowenstein offered him $2,000 a week to act as social decoy...
Alexander turned him down. Though he despised Lowenstein he liked the late, equally notorious Ivar Kreuger, would never admit that he was a crook. He fell in love with a young Englishwoman at Biarritz, but it came to nothing because she insisted on marriage and his wife would not give him a divorce. He became a spiritualist. Finally he did the accepted thing, went to the U. S. as a lecturer. At his first lecture (in a Baptist church in Grand Rapids) the unexpected strains of the Russian National Anthem made him blench. Nothing else in the U. S. seems...