Word: spokes
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Dates: during 1940-1940
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...afternoon session was opened by Professor Sidney B. Fay '96, who spoke on "What the Nazi Revolution Means." Professor Fay, an authority on German history and culture, traced the accomplishments and failures of Nazism in terms of German morale...
...evening meeting began with a discussion of "Can American Democracy Survive?" by Professor J. Anton de Haas. Professor de Haas was followed by Professor A. H. Hansen, who spoke on "The Impact of a Totalitarian Victory on the American Economy," and suggested that a German Europe and a British-American-Far Eastern economic bloc could exist side by side...
Three hundred years ago, when Henry Dunster, in whose memory the House is named, was president of the College, Henry Saltonstall was an undergraduate. Last evening the ninth Saltonstall in direct succession, to attend Harvard, Leverett, spoke, both as a member of the Board of Overseers and as Governor of Massachusetts...
January 1930 was the worst possible moment for a historical novel to come out. Amid long and difficult labor pains, the "proletarian" novel was being born. If the hero and heroine spoke bad English mixed with a brave obscenity, they were proletarians. Characters who spoke good English were, by Depression critical standards, the enemies of progress...
...very few U. S. businessmen conscientiously made themselves specialists in foreign countries, cultivating good relations not only as good business but as a patriotic duty. Last week in Manhattan, at the annual session of the Academy of Political Science, a businessman who is a specialist on Japan spoke some far-reaching words. That Banker Thomas Lament's words would be heard in Tokyo seemed certain, for the House of Morgan was once U. S. banker for Japan. That some of his words would suggest to Japanese how they looked to Western eyes also seemed certain: "I have made many...