Abstract

It Seems to Heywood Broun

Broun, Heywood | July 30, 1930 issue

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The European and the South American are far more efficient than the average American. The foreigner goes to his office only when there is work to be done. Hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers rush downtown on days when they know that nobody is going to turn a hand. They seem to feel that they must report just the same and be at post if only to preserve the franchise. The American business man who idles about his house upon a mean and stuffy day when there is nothing whatsoever to do at the office is called a loafer and a parasite.

See Also:

BUSINESS enterprises -- United States; SOUTH Americans; EUROPEANS; BUSINESSMEN; BUSINESS; UNITED States
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