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1920s and Harvard
In the early 1920s, he was financial editor of The New York Evening Mail, and it was during this period, Hazlitt reported, that his understanding of economics was further refined by frequent discussions with former Harvard economics professor Benjamin Anderson who was then working for Chase National Bank in Manhattan.
In the 1920s, Australian-born Harvard professor Elton Mayo and his colleagues conducted productivity studies at Western Electric's Hawthorne plant in the United States.
Franco earned his Ph. D Degree at Harvard in 1986, with a dissertation on hyperinflations in the 1920s in Europe ( Germany, Austria, Hungary, and Poland ).
At that time, the concept of providing business training in the academic environment was gaining popularity, thus MIT created a program “ specially designed to train men to be competent managers of businesses that have much to do with engineering problems .” Harvard also began offering short five-week selections of standard MBA material in the late 1920s.
In the 1920s, the league picked up the nickname the " Little Three ," in contrast to the " Big Three ," ( Harvard, Yale, and Princeton ) and the name has stuck.
Most of Currier's bedrooms are single bedrooms connected by a sinkroom or full private bathroom, a rarity at Harvard ( where most dormitories date to the 1920s and are now relatively crowded.

1920s and University
In the late 1920s, sociologists at the University of Chicago subdivided the city into 77 distinct community areas, which can further be subdivided into over 200 neighborhoods.
Apparently Husserl and Heidegger had moved apart during the 1920s, which became clearer after 1928 when Husserl retired and Heidegger succeeded to his University chair.
As an organized movement, Humanism itself is quite recent – born at the University of Chicago in the 1920s, and made public in 1933 with the publication of the first Humanist Manifesto.
From its founding until through early 1920s, the University grew rapidly.
* Fugitives ( poets ), a 1920s American literary circle at Vanderbilt University ; publishers of The Fugitive, a literary magazine that showcased their works
The University of Utah campus in the early 1920s
Twenty miles northwest is the D. H. Lawrence Ranch ( originally known as the Kiowa Ranch and now owned by the University of New Mexico ), the home of the English novelist in the 1920s.
Other notable buildings are the Forbes Mill annex, dating to 1880 and now housing a history museum ; Los Gatos High School which dates from the 1920s ; and the Old Town Shopping Center, formerly the University Avenue School ( the school was established in 1882 ; the current buildings date to 1923 ).
In the early 1920s, the author-folklorist J. Frank Dobie briefly left the University of Texas at Austin to work his uncle's ranch in La Salle County.
Further expansions through the 1920s and 1930s was made possible through private donors, such as the two daughters of Edward Turner Sims for the construction of the University library, and from the people of Southampton, enabling new buildings on both sides of University Road.
* Dothan was the birthplace and childhood home of Johnny Mack Brown, an All-American football player at the University of Alabama and a Hollywood actor during the 1920s and ' 30's.
In the early 1920s, brothers Lee and George Koser began purchasing and developing the land that became the city of University Heights, anticipating the westward expansion of the University and the city.
Jackson's Mill, a childhood home of Stonewall Jackson, is approximately four miles ( 6 km ) north of Weston ; it has been operated as a 4-H facility since the 1920s and is also the site of conference center operated by the West Virginia University Extension Service.
These opinions are now standard. Though his time as an academic was quite brief, he taught and encouraged a number of evolutionary biologists at the University of Oxford in the 1920s.
Hubert Foss, the Oxford University Press's musical editor during the 1920s and 1930s, writes that rather than creating his music from the known possibilities of instruments, Delius " thought the sounds first " and then sought the means for producing these particular sounds.
Lasswell studied at the University of Chicago in the 1920s, and was highly influenced by the pragmatism taught there, especially as propounded by John Dewey and George Herbert Mead.
This line of analysis was more fully and explicitly developed by Clarence E. Ayres of the University of Texas at Austin from the 1920s.
Though he studied at the University of California, Berkeley, he was still virtually self-taught when he began writing music of his own, but in the early 1920s he had lessons from Arthur Bliss ( then in Santa Barbara ) and the senior American composer and researcher of American Indian ( then called " Red Indian ") music, Arthur Farwell.
In the mid 1920s, the university was renamed the " King Alexander University in Ljubljana " ( Universitas Alexandrina Labacensis ) and continued to grow and develop both in size and quality despite financial troubles and constant pressure from Yugoslav governments ’ centralist policies.
It emerged as an academic discipline in the 1920s, beginning with Berkeley police chief August Vollmer who established a criminal justice program at the University of California, Berkeley in 1916.
The Debate on the Foundations of Mathematics in the 1920s, Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK.
In the 1920s he studied architecture at the Academy of San Carlos, the Art and Architecture school at the National Autonomous University.
Points on the Dial: Golden Age Radio Beyond the Networks ( Duke University Press ; 2010 ) 278 pages ; discusses regional and local radio as forms that " complicate " the image of the medium as a national unifier from the 1920s to the 1950s.

1920s and researcher
According to researcher Sari Kawana, he was one of the writers involved in writing " mad scientist murders ," a subgenre within the larger stream of Japanese detective fiction during the 1920s and 1930s.
She also created the Indian Welfare Committee of the General Federation of Women ’ s Clubs, working as a researcher for it through much of the 1920s.
Through the 1920s, his own research was devoted mainly to animal nutrition, his focus changed to human nutrition both as a researcher and an active lobbyist and propagandist for improving people's diets.
Use of the oil itself, as opposed to the unextracted plant material, did not become common practice until researcher Arthur Penfold published the first reports of its antimicrobial activity in a series of papers in the 1920s and 1930s.
In 2001, Eric Simonson, leader of the 1999 Mallory and Irvine Expedition, and German researcher Jochen Hemmleb, who inspired it, travelled to Beijing to interview some of the remaining survivors of the 1960 Chinese Everest expedition, which had been the first expedition back to the north side since the British attempts of the 1920s and 1930s.
Lonsdale worked at the University of Leeds in the late 1920s, was mostly a full-time mother of small children during the early 1930s, and returned to work with Bragg at the Royal Institution as a researcher in 1934.

1920s and William
The concept can be traced to at least the Dadaists of the 1920s, but was popularized in the late 1950s and early 1960s by writer William S. Burroughs, and has since been used in a wide variety of contexts.
In the late 1920s Alston joined Bearden and other black artists who refused to exhibit in William E. Harmon Foundation shows, which featured all-black artists in their traveling exhibits.
He attributes to her directly the first of the key events ( after the advances made by William F. Albright at Tell Beit Mirsim in the 1920s ) that brought about our modern understanding of pottery in the southern Levant:
Designers who produced work for the Underground in the 1920s and 1930s include Man Ray, Edward McKnight Kauffer, William Kermode and Fougasse.
William Lyon Mackenzie King, PC, OM, CMG ( December 17, 1874 – July 22, 1950 ), also commonly known as Mackenzie King, was the dominant Canadian political leader from the 1920s through the 1940s.
Stars such as Dorothy Mackaill, Bebe Daniels, Frank Fay, Winnie Lightner, Bernice Claire, Alexander Gray, Alice White, and Jack Mulhall that had characterized the urban, modern, and sophisticated attitude of the 1920s gave way to stars such James Cagney, Joan Blondell, Edward G. Robinson, Warren William, and Barbara Stanwyck who would be more acceptable to the common man.
William John Cooper Lawrence, who hybridized hundreds of families of dahlias in the 1920s, stated: " I have not yet seen any two plants in the families I have raised which were not to be distinguished one from the other.
* William Alexander Smith ( boxer ) ( 1904 – 1955 ), South African boxer of the 1920s
The Clark Mansion, a Clarkdale landmark since the United Verde Copper Company heir William Clark III, grandson of Clarkdale's founder William Andrews Clark, built it in the late 1920s, east of town across the Verde River near Pecks Lake.
This strip included a canal that had been dug by William Matheson in the 1920s, and which extended from the bay across most of the island.
It was purchased by William Randolph Hearst in the 1920s, dismantled and shipped to the United States, and reassembled after Hearst's death in North Miami Beach in the 1950s.
In the 1920s and 1930s Richard W. Schabacker published several books which continued the work of Charles Dow and William Peter Hamilton in their books Stock Market Theory and Practice and Technical Market Analysis.
In the 1920s, David William Thomas edited a weekly newspaper in Hammond prior to moving to Minden, the seat of Webster Parish.
* William Collins ( tennis ), British tennis player from the 1920s and 30s
Meanwhile Senator J. William Fulbright, who established the Fulbright Program, was a Rhodes Scholar at Pembroke in the 1920s.
In the 1920s, William Jennings Bryan was one of the guest speakers at a Chautauqua meeting in Fossil.
During the Progressive Era ( 1890s – 1920s ), Presidents Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, and Woodrow Wilson instituted regulation on parts of the American economy, most notably in regulating big business and industry.
* William David Williams, Blackpool and Everton footballer of the 1920s
William Harrison " Jack " Dempsey (" The Manassa Mauler ") ( June 24, 1895 – May 31, 1983 ) was an American professional boxer and cultural icon of the 1920s.
Thirty years after its premiere, William Grossman and Jack Farrell denounced the entire Aeolian concert, including Rhapsody in Blue, saying the " clumsily syncopated ' jazz ' was gradually replaced with ponderous pseudosymphonic harmonies played over dance rhythms, culminating in the concert rendition of Gershwin ’ s Rhapsody in Blue, one of the most ludicrous of the popular attempts during the 1920s to merge jazz and ' serious ' music ".
He did not really pick up his rate of output until the 1920s, when he wrote Das Himmelskleid ( 1925 ) and Sly ( 1927 ), the latter based on William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew.
William F. Friedman attacked the Hebern machine soon after it came on the market in the 1920s.
Formal education in Spiritualist practice emerged in 1920s, with organizations like the William T. Stead Center in Chicago, Illinois, and continue today with the Arthur Findlay College at Stansted Hall in England, and the Morris Pratt Institute in Wisconsin, USA.

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