Word: reporter
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Walter Albert Jessup, 61-year-old president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching,* believes that U. S. .colleges are too big and too bad. Each year, in his report for the Foundation, he offers fresh facts to prove his point. Last year he took colleges to task for buying tuba players with scholarships (TIME, Feb. 14, 1938). Last week Dr. Jessup led off the Foundation's 33rd annual report by giving the rough side of his tongue to another growing evil: tramp scholars...
Most economists agree that sustained U. S. recovery depends on a real rise in demand for producer goods. Last week there were signs of such a rise. Meanwhile, General Motors' report on 1938 earnings brought home last year's ominous disparity between recovery in consumer and producer goods...
Dewey, joined Marshall Field at the bottom in 1922. That his rise in Marshall Field is likely to continue appeared last week as President Corley released the company's annual report. Though the retail division's profit was down from $5,029,090 in 1937 to $3,940,099, Mr. McBain's manufacturing division came back from 1937's $5,679,209 loss to net a cozy $138,165. Even the real-estate division, only one still headed by a McKinsey man, showed a profit...
University students are probably more religious than the population at large, stated Dean Sperry in his annual report today. He pointed out that figures show that religious affiliations are claimed by 80 per cent of the students while only 55 per cent of the country's adult population are members of religious groups...
...petition read, "We, the undersigned students in Harvard University, ask that the Student Council appoint a committee to report on the non-reappointment of assistant professor Robin D. Feild in particular, and the educational policy of the Fine Arts Department in general...