Word: reale
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...stories, but the reviewer is sentimental enough to wish that the cynical conclusion had not been added. Mr. Babcock's "Willie's Golden Moment" is almost as bad as a story can be. It is to a good dime novel as a melodrama of the movies to a real tragedy. As for Mr. Burk's fragmentary "Delay," a Senior editor should know better than to set such an example of halfdone work...
...Sweetser went by bicycle from the Belgian border to Paris, a journey which he describes vivaciously, making real his many exciting experiences on the road. It is a vivid picture of the war, its ravages, and the men and women near it. As a story full of interest Mr. Sweetser's volume holds us to the last, for he seems to have put a good deal of his own charming personality into the tale, and we often feel that we are by his side. From the very first sentence, which begins: "Flash! snapped the telegraph operator--," we feel the thrill...
...love to tell of Harvard, the real Harvard, as I found her; the generous Harvard, the liberal Harvard, the sympathetic Harvard, the democratic Harvard, the Harvard of opportunities for the poorest lad in all the land. This is the real Harvard as I came to know her and to love her. The Harvard, the least affected with the false spirit of wealthy aristocracy and snobbery, and the most democratic of our great universities in America; the Harvard, where any poor boy without wealth or social distinction can go, trusting only in the ambition of an honest heart and noble purpose...
Business School men are found in a wide variety of occupations according to a canvass made last year by the Business Alumni Association. Manufacturing is clearly the most popular, appealing to more men than any other two fields. Accounting and statistics, banking and brokerage, and real estate and insurance are close together in number, each with approximately one-half the number of men that take up manufacturing
Business School men are found in a wide variety of businesses, according to a canvass made by the Business Alumni Association last year. Manufacturing is clearly the most popular, appealing to more men than any other two fields. Accounting and statistics, banking and brokerage, and real estate and insurance are close together in number, each with approximately one-half the number of men that take up manufacturing. The other callings with a considerable representation are in this order: railroads, advertising and selling, "efficiency engineering," teaching, statistical work, local utilities, law, foreign trade, printing and publishing, chamber of commerce work...