Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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This leaves the Student Advisors with the sole task of orienting the Freshman with his new surroundings, and assisting him in such social difficulties as he may encounter at the beginning of the term...
...from its humble beginnings in 1908 the Graduate School of Business Administration finds itself today in a position rich not only in its unparalleled facilities and prestige but in the brilliant tradition of its social and economic service to the nation. The opening of another term in this succession of years devoted to a realization of the emerging significance of business as a profession presents an occasion to consider the potential value of the School both to its students as individuals and to the general public...
...accessible. This logical corollary, not at first fully perceived by business men, with their jealous traditions of secrecy, was of necessity emphasized, though with caution, by the new collegiate business schools. But business men themselves were beginning to realize that their individual interest coincided with that of larger social groups and were gradually becoming more willing to share their knowledge. Trade associations were proliferating and they were busy in formulating codes of ethics. Business men were enjoying in the United States the esteem and respect paid to a high social class. These are the signs of an emerging profession...
...make of the factory nomerely a mechanizing evil necessary to society but itself a civilizing agency. And the far-sighted leaders among business men, both here and in Europe are coming to see what it implies in the ever nicer adjustment of economic means to social ends, which is the meaning of management. "Human engineering" now is demanding the cooperation of highly diverse scientific specialists--economists, statisticians, political scientists, historians, psychologists, biologists, physiologists, as well as men of the medical, legal, and engineering professions and always at the center the business planners and coordinators."The Oldest of the Arts...
Personality. Physique, dress, manners, quality of voice, choice of language and characteristic social relations all go to make your personality. But they are useful only to the extent to which they affect the people you come in touch with. Thus decided Yale's Mark Arthur May, trying to develop a scale to measure personality. Zero would be a person who does not count for anything to anyone. High grade would be he whose presence or absence has the greatest influence on others...