Word: offerred
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Engineering School and the Graduate School of Business Administration now offer jointly five-year programs in engineering and business. There are three such programs with options in mechanical, electrical and civil engineering. The first three years are identical with the corresponding engineering programs, but must include the industrial work of the third year. The fourth and fifth years will be devoted to simultaneous instruction in engineering and business, which includes (a) all the fourth-year work of the corresponding four-year engineering program, and (b) the substance of the program of "industrial management" as offered in the Business School, namely...
...these are the facts, what can Harvard in particular, offer to this new group of travelling scholars? Harvard should be the "leader in thought; should lead the whole nation and perhaps the whole world in future years in delimiting, as well as in extending, the field of instruction." For instance, said Mr. Sims, it may not be necessary for a man to go to Harvard to be a lawyer, because practical lawyers must, necessarily, under modern conditions, be made in their own localities. "But it will be necessary for the instructor who teaches him in his own state...
...reasons which influence the college man to avoid the railroads; (2) to show that the educated man is now needed more than ever before in railroad service; and (3) to call attention to changed conditions which may make the railroads recognize the value of college graduates and offer inducements which will attract them...
...with Georgia Tech on Tuesday, April 19th. Negotiations are still under way to arrange a third game with some other college in the vicinity of Atlanta, and at present it looks as if the University of Georgia, which will met the University in football next fall, will accept the offer to meet the Crimson nine at Atlanta on April 21st. Georgia is said to have a strong nine...
...return to the pre war race for naval supremacy would not only be costly at a time when cost is a major consideration, but would eventually defeat the very purposes of the war by bringing about a return of the "tooth and claw" theory of existence. England's offer may not be the best plan for securing a "naval holiday," but at least it is an offer which is backed by a willingness to act instead of talk. As such, it may hope to merit the best of Congressional attention...