Word: outlooks
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...planned to discuss at some length the business outlook. I find so many other things to say that I shall have to forego that. Briefly, however, I am convinced that we definitely turned the corner in business depression several months ago and that the gradual improvement which has begun to occur in several industries is the forerunner of general and widespread improvement in business. The improvement may be slow; it may be spotty; it may be threatened from time to time by political disturbances in Europe and other world influences. Nevertheless American business is throughly sound at heart. In this...
...Business School is having no difficulty in completing the enrollment of its next entering class, recently limited to three hundred men; applications enough to provide for approximately two thirds of the quota have already been received. This would be an encouraging outlook but for the fact that few of the applicants are Harvard men. It seems hardly credible that this should be the case,--that those who are best able to know the good work the school is doing should be so poorly represented in its membership. The only reason which can be ascribed is that it is considered...
...outlook for next year is promising with Captain Pratt. Nunneker, and Treaner, three excellent players returning, together with several other regulars. The 1924 team will also furnish some clever stickmen, notably Captain A. L. Hepworth, W. D. Cole, and R. H. Jacobson
...more democratic, inasmuch as "approximately thirty per cent of the students are working their way through; the Captains of the baseball team, the football team, the track team, and the basketball teams are all self-supporting men." Both speeches have to do with college democracy; one represents the broad outlook of a graduate, the other the narrower view of the undergraduate...
Undergraduates of a university which prides itself above all upon breadth of outlook; can find much food for reflection in Dr. Angell's speech at the Union last night when he warned against provincialism...