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...official of the Chinese government for over twenty years, and is now the Adviser to the President of China. During this time he has also been connected with the Chinese Red Cross, and has received a number of honors from the Chinese and other governments. In a recent interview for the CRIMSON, Mr. Ferguson discussed the problems of the restoration, and explained why he thought that there was no more real danger of a monarchist revolution...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MR. J. C. FERGUSON DISCUSSES PROBLEMS OF CHINA | 5/11/1921 | See Source »

This meeting will afford an excellent opportunity for those interested in industrial relations to get the viewpoint of Mr. Emery, a man who has been most active in the movement favoring the open shop. In discussing the question recently in an interview for the Crimson, he said "It (the open shop question) cannot be settled by mere pious ejaculations nor passionate shibboleths. It is much more than differences of opinion between organized labor and employers. The controversy does not rest upon mere economic circumstance. It has essential social and political aspects of fundamental importance to the citizen individually...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO HOLD FORUM ON OPEN SHOP THIS AFTERNOON | 5/11/1921 | See Source »

...succeeding in bringing Professor Wolfson before the student body through the medium of so necessary and so instructive an interview the Crimson has added to its journalistic attainment. It is nothing short of a "scoop" which will bring attention to the Crimson columns not hitherto accorded them. The editors are to be congratulated on their policy of liberal use of their columns for the discussion of problems that cannot but awaken interest and wholesome understanding among otherwise antagonistic elements in the community. HENRY EPSTEIN...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 5/5/1921 | See Source »

...such an alarming light by the preliminary statistics of the Interstate Commerce Commission for the month of January, 1921, arises directly from the railroads last year overestimating additional revenues and underestimating additional expenses, according to Professor W. J. Cunningham, of the Graduate School of Business Administration, in a recent interview for the Crimson. But there are indications of an early improvement, and meanwhile, the best plan for the railroads is to refrain from any radical steps, get what relief they can from an extension of their economies, and hold on until traffic revives...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RAILROAD SITUATION SHOWS SIGNS OF IMPROVEMENT | 4/14/1921 | See Source »

...novel, of the type of "Main Street," so much in vogue today, that deals with drab, everyday life in a colorless wag, will not last long as a classic, according to Joseph C. Lincoln, noted American novelist, In a recent interview for the Crimson. These novels form but one more example of the attempt of the Realists to supplant the Romanticists in the field of literature, Mr. Lincoln said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REALISTS UNCOMPROMISING | 4/9/1921 | See Source »

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