joys, for four years, and here we were enveloped by old friends, by relatives, by new friends, until we knew not which way to turn. In addition, Carl
lty member; we chaperoned student parties till we heard rag-time in our sleep. From January 1 to May 16, we had
it happened, we were at home together,-and said: "I thought I should like the pleasure of telling you personally, though you will receive official notice in t
ed the Library. He must know the excitement. He was pleased. He slipped his hand into his pocket saying, "I must have a hand in this cel
fessorship. But always before and always
never do. "I don't wish to hear more of such rumors." Just then the remnants of the internals of a Ford, hung together with picture wire and painted white, whizzed around the corner. Two slouching, hard-working "studes" caught sight
was petitioned by twelve students of the College of Agriculture to give a course in the Economics of Agriculture, and they guaranteed him twenty-five students. One hundred and thirty enrolled, and as Carl surveyed the assortment below him, he realized that a good half of them did not know and did not want to know a pear tree from a tractor. He stiffened his upper lip, stiffened his examinations, and cinch
d nothing to justify it except its supporters' claim of "efficiency." He had little love for that word-it is usually bought at too great a cost. That year, as usual, he had a small seminar of carefully picked students. He got them to open their eyes to conditions as they were. When they ceased to accept those conditions jus
, who had something to gain from the established order, took up the fight. Soon we had a "warning" from one of the Regents that Carl's efforts on behalf of "democracy" were unwelcome. Bu
mething that needed expression in words. I never heard him use the term. To him the Individual was everything-by that I mean that every relation he had was on a personal basis. He could not go into a shop to buy a necktie hurriedly, without passing a word with the clerk; when he paid his fare on th
with every one within a conversational radius. Our wealthy friends would tell us he ruined their chauffeurs-they got so that they didn't know their places. As likely as not, he would jolt some constrained bank president by engaging him in genial conversation without an introduction; at a formal dinner he would, as a matter of course, have a word or two with the butler when he passed the cracked crab, although at times the butlers seemed somewhat pained thereby.
ue and Unionism,' or 'Technique and Labor.' Believes it is a big new consideration." Again he wrote: "I have just finished working through a book on 'Immigration' by Professor Fairchild of Yale,-437 pages published three weeks ago,-lent me by Professor Ross. It is the very book I have been looking for and is superb. I can't get over how stimulating this looking in on a group of University men has been. It in itself is worth the trip. I feel sure of my field of work; that I am not going off in unfruitful directions; that I am keeping up with the wagon. I am now set on finishing my book right away-want it out wi
em being done. The thing for me to do here is to see, and see the things I'm going to write into my thesis. I want to spend a week, if I can, digging into the steel industry. With my fine information about the ore [he had just acquired that], I am anxious to fil
all; and the next day-or that same day, later-war was declared. Which meant just this-that the University of Heidelberg sent word that it would not be safe for Carl to send over his thesis,-there were about three or four hundred copies to go, according to German University regulations,-until the situation had quieted down somewhat. The result was that those three Or four hundred copies lay stacked up in the printing-office for three or four years, until at last Carl decided it was not a very good thesis anyway, and he didn't want any one t
in great volume, class lines will be forming and reforming, weak and instable. To prohibit or gre
ith eloquent tongue, without conscience, who did not care for the nation, could put this whole country into a flame? Don't you know that this country, from one end to the other, believes th
asses are employer and employee, the third is the great middle class, looking on. What is the rela
lationships in industrial production, must seek its reason-to-be in economic causes. Profits, market, financing, are placed in certain jeopardy by such a labor policy, and this risk is not continued, generation after generation, as a casual indulgence in temper. Deep below the strong charges against the unions of narrow self-interest and un-American limitation of output, dressed by the Citizens' Alliance in the language of t
ld interfere? Or did a labor condition arise which allowed the employer to wreck the union with such ease, that he
an analysis of certain factors in in
ose hands has industrial capitalism for the moment fallen,
aracteristics the character of the labor and the geographical location of the industry, and even destroys the danger o
be stationary as in England, can diminish
l characteristic, however, must be taken for granted. That is the commercialized business morality which guides American economic life. The responsibili
oe at the Exposition-we looked holes through the one we wanted. Our trip was planned to the remotest detail. We never did come into our own in the matter of our vacations, although no two people could have more fun in the

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