Word: predictably
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Such executives elect are in particular demand now; in the last 20 years, an ever-decreasing number of young men (and, to be sure, women) have entered the banking and finance field, obviously because of the depression and the war. Thus, banks themselves predict a great influx of younger administrators because of the scarcity of competition for the lucrative jobs day by day being vacated by the retirement of older men. And banks, staid and traditional as they may appear to be, are taking a progressive and competitive concern in their hiring programs. What, then, do these companies offer...
Samuel H. Donnell '37, Assistant Dean of the Graduate School of Business Administration, said that the Business School is running well ahead on applications for next year. He did predict, however, that for the first time some men will have to withdraw because of pressure from draft boards...
...conference that many of Europe's people seemed to want. But their governments had assented to it without enthusiasm (even to Churchill, this was no substitute for meeting Malenkov in Moscow). It was fairly safe to predict in advance that it would produce no dramatic settlement, or even a peace treaty for Germany or Austria. Yet it was fast building into an important testing time in the cold war. In this weighing room, after four years, the Big Four will test ,anew the jiggling scales of world power...
...Editor. On Nov. 3, Mr. John Fox, Harvard '29, and now publisher of the Boston Post, ran one of his front page editorials. He said: "The world, by and large, are of the opinion that at any given time in the course of history, it is not possible to predict the future doings of the Kremlin slave-masters. The world believe that until events...
...Journal did not predict exactly how much the draft calls would fall, and the spokesman also refused to give an approximate figure...