Vietnam or Thailand ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !
Updated: June 16, 2025
Unwin, Industrial Organization in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries. S. and B. Webb, The History of Trade Unionism. Wallas, The Great Society. 1914. G. D. H. Cole, The World of Labour. 1915. On this point see Poverty and Waste, by Hartley Withers, 1914, written before the war, which has driven its lessons home. The Living Past, pp. 20, 21. Second Thoughts of an Economist, p. 89.
Graham Wallas made an investigation into this very question, the results of which confirmed the general impression that modern workmen find little happiness in their work. But two of the conclusions which he reached conflict in a rather curious way with the statement of Professor Taussig. Mr.
An endless variety of turbans, sheep-skin caps, and conical bonnets, distinguish the Asiatics from the "Toppee Wallas" or hat-wearers of Europe; and a still greater variety exists amongst the boats of different nations.
The day wore on, and the fog turned to drizzle and the drizzle to rain. They held out against it as long as they could, but had to take shelter at last, and herd together in their extemporised cabin. Here a painful discussion ensued, "I hope you're satisfied now!" growled Wallas. "This is mess enough to please even you, Bowler."
Matthew Arnold's visit came too early to be recorded in the college paper, but he was perhaps the first of a notable list of distinguished Englishmen who have helped to quicken the interest of Wellesley students along social lines. Graham Wallas, Lowes-Dickinson, H. G. Wells, are a few of the names found in the pages of the Magazine and the News.
Whatever the job may be, women want to work in preference to the nonproductiveness of most home life to-day. Graham Wallas, in his Great Society, quotes the answers given by a number of girls to a woman who held their confidence as to why they worked. He wished to learn if they were happy.
Oxford and Working Class Education. Clarendon Press, 1s. net. PATERSON, ALEXANDER. Across the Bridges. 1912. Arnold. 1s. 0d. net. Continuation Schools in England and Elsewhere. 1908. Manchester University Press. 8s. 6d. net. SCOTT, C.A. Social Education. 1908. Ginn. 6s. 0d. net. WALLAS, GRAHAM. The Great Society. 1914. Macmillan. 7s. 6d. net. See also: Board of Education. Reports.
"Couldn't you think of somebody else, Braintree?" asked Gayford. "Oh, have Cwashford. He's a wewy decent fellah. I like Cwashford, you know." "Well, there's this to be said," remarked Bowler, finding there was no getting out of it, "it may be rather a good thing to have some one to keep in order; it will give us something to do." "Yes, I expect you'll want it," said Wallas.
"Rather not; nor Wragg but what do you say to Wallas?" "He's muffed quarter-back rather this term, but I daresay he might do for one." "Well then, what about Braintree?" "Too big a swell," said Bowler. "But he's got a rifle at home." "Oh, ah! all serene. Stick him down." "What do you say to having them in, and talking it over before we ask any one else?"
Graham Wallas remarks that those who have eaten of the tree of knowledge cannot forget "Mr. Chesterton cries out, like the Cyclops in the play, against those who complicate the life of man, and tells us to eat 'caviare on impulse, instead of 'grapenuts on principle. But since we cannot unlearn our knowledge, Mr. Chesterton is only telling us to eat caviare on principle."
Word Of The Day
Others Looking