Word: fulle
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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With the opening of the first full year in its new buildings, the Harvard Business School has made several valuable additions to its teaching staff. A new course in Business History, given by Professor H. S. B. Gras, former Professor in the University of Minnesota, has been added to the curriculum...
Professor H. G. Lewis, former, Dean of the University of Washington' Business School, is taking the post of Professor of Marketing. After giving one course on International Comercial Relations here last year, Professor J. Anton De Haas, formerly of New York University, is taking his place as a full member of the Business School faculty...
Guarnaccia rose suddenly to first team rank last year because of his great speed and weight and his accurate passing. As yet a relatively inexperienced player, he possesses possibilities for much development. As a ball carrier he is strongly reminiscent of A. H. Miller '27, former University sprinter and full back. With almost Miller's speed, Guarnaccia is lighter and better able to vary his pace than his predecessor, and more dangerous to opposing teams because of his passing ability...
...these efficient days nobody but an anchorite can escape the statistical hounds. On every trail the researchers are in full cry. Who knows in how many bureaus you may be tabulated and cross-indexed, if only to point a social moral or illustrate an economic trend? Nobody so humble or so proud but some official Boswell has captured him for an exhibit. The inquisitors get you from ambush anyhow, but if you expose yourself directly to the questionnaire volley by applying for something you are riddled, as at Harvard. You are filed, indexed, blue printed, graphed, annotated and footnoted; cultures...
...contrast to the advent of the Freshman, the upperclassman arrives in Cambridge officially unnoticed. He has put aside the buoymant brightness of the youths who, making their college debut, are full of hope for the four golden years. He betrays no interest in the novelty of his surroundings. He has long outgrown the state of credulity that indicates inward illusions and is peculiarly attractive to book-agents and purveyors of pressing contracts. The upperclassmen returning passes through the Square unremarked. He belongs in it, for another year at least, like the Pill...