Word: problem
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...destructive (TIME, March 23), has kept hammering away at them ever since. "Let us have an end of generalities about 'co-operation,' 'confidence' and 'breathing spells,' " he barked last month. "The Government will not have done its part in solving the unemployment problem until it breaks specific log-jams...
...stood, until recently, for the very best that education has to offer, would be an act of supreme discourtesy to Heidelberg and to the reputation that it has built up over five centuries. The Harvard Student Union is merely trying to make an issue of a non-political problem, because it is unable to resist any opportunity to take a crack at the Germany Government of today...
...Order; John MacI. Cassels, An Economic Analysis of Milk Marketing and Prices; Elizabeth W. Gilbey, Statistics of Consumption; Robert A. Gordon, A Case Study of Enterprise and Profits in the Modern Corporation; Wassily W. Leontief, Inter-relationship of American Industries in 1929; Edward S. Mason and Associates, The Trust Problem and Policy; Talcott Parsons, Informal Institutional Control in the Medical Profession, and Comparative Study of the Leading Professions in the U.S. and Europe; and Carle C. Zimmerman, The Community during the Depression...
...Under the Axe of Fascism" is concerned only with one aspect of Fascism, "those institutions through which Fascism claims to have solved the problem of the relations between capital and labor." Professor Salvemini has not relied upon the observations of contemporary historians, but has drawn his information almost exclusively from Fascist sources--Italian newspapers, political speeches, and the like. There is no limit to his poignant ridicule of Mussolini's defenders. He takes delight in combusting the wild assumptions and vague generalities of British critics, notably Mr. Goad and Major Barnes, two superficial students of the new "revolution...
...equally intriguing bit of news relayed us by one of our spies. While rowing up the river in a shell he was amused to see a shiny new arrow floating downstream followed by another, equally new and every bit as shiny. After really going to town on the problem he learned that they were two of three purchased, together with a "Robin Hood" standard brand bow, from Sears, Roebuck. The two in the river were the results of bad marksmanship. The one in the Lowell House tower was the result of annoyance at a noisy robin. If you want...