Word: controllers
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...Aeromarine sea plane is a plane designed primarily for training purposes. It has dual control, wings pitched upward to prevent skidding and other features which have won for it the reputation of being the safest plane that the Navy ever flew. A speed of 65 knots can be attained in it. The Aeromarine has the pontoon beneath the lower plane which distinguishes it from the flying boat in which the cockpit is in the hull, and the motor above the pilots head. In the Aeromarine the engine is in front of the pilot...
...problems of capital and labor are dealt with in three short articles: "The New Industrial Era--Federal vs. Private Control of Business"; "Democracy and Capital"; Radical Reforms and the Laboring-man's Liberties." In the first is treated the control of monopoly in a democratic state; in the second, the value of capital and labor to the state and to each other; in the third, possible methods of ameliorating the lot of the poor classes,--surely three of the most pressing questions in our industrial life. Unlike most treatments of these topics, the opinions advanced are based on carefully thought...
...ball. W. B. Felton, Occ. and E. S. Hardell '21. served on the mound for A and B respectively. Felton, although showing steaks of good pitching, for the most part kept the catcher busy reaching for his delivery. Hardell, who was reached for more hits, had consistently better control...
...appointment of Mr. Frank A. Vanderlip to the Faculty of the Business School is in keeping with its policy of maintaining close personal contact with the business world. Mr. Vanderlip is a man of keen insight and high intelligence, who has had the experience of exercising economic control on a large scale. His first-hand knowledge of high finance and of economic conditions all over the world, coupled with his interest in the theoretical phases of the modern business structure, should make his connection with the University exceptionally fruitful...
...degree of reason-that this last bill is only a sham. It is certain enough that under its provisions neither the two divided legislatures, nor the single united one, are entrusted with anything like a sufficient degree of responsibility. Of the total amount of the Irish revenues, Ireland has control of less than one tenth. The police, always such a fertile source of grievance, remains in English hands. These are but two instances of how what might appear at first to be a real grant of power is nibbled down to nothingness. There can be no objection to allowing North...