Word: masses
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...meeting of the Student Council last night, three Seniors and two Juniors were appointed members. William Ichabod Nichols of Wilton, Conn.; James Laurence Carroll Jr., of Reading, Mass.; and Edward Campbell Aswell, of Nashville, Tenn., are the three new members from 1926. The Juniors are John Randolph Burke, of Milton, Mass., and Ellsworth Charles Haggerty, of Allston, Mass...
...present unemployment and labor unrest need not be taken as an outcropping of national dissatisfaction and unhappiness," claims Dr. Rand. "On the contrary, many more are employed now than before the war, and the mass of the working classes receive better wages and enjoy better condons than in any previous period of English History...
...Court of St. James's, to Alan Gillespie Rinehart, son of Dr. Stanley M. Rinehart* and Novelist Mary Roberts Rinehart of Washington, D. C., and onetime (1923) Political Editor of TIME, the Weekly News-Magazine; in the private chapel of the Houghton estate overlooking Padanaram Bay, Mass...
Died. Herbert Parsons, 56, lawyer, Republican politician, onetime New York City Alderman (1900-1903), onetime member of Congress (1905-11), onetime (1916-1920) Republican National Committeeman from New York; in the House of Mercy Hospital, Pittsfield, Mass., of a ruptured kidney sustained attempting to ride his son's motor-driven bicycle...
...taught deserves no such high praise. Not that it is inhuman at all, for Anthropology 1 is one of those mediocre courses which are at once the curse of the University and the backbone of its moderately high level of instruction. There is a bewildering mass of miscellaneous facts to be mastered which from their very nature can not be too systematically coordinated. The course will provoke enthusiasm from those few who have a decided bent for this sort of thing and from the rest the semi-boredom with which the majority of students always regard a course so conducted...