Word: student
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...special Business School edition of the CRIMSON which may be found in the Baker Library today brings the news that a newly started notice column carrying the official and miscellaneous communications of the school will serve every student in the Business School as well as the other departments of the University...
Finally, the original documents, dismortgages, leases, corporation histories vision provides source material in the form of account books, letter books and other private unprinted papers which permit the student to examine in detail the experience of individual business enterprises of earlier years. Here are the documents relating to early cotton mills to banks to merchandising establishments, and the like--material which permits the investigator to penetrate even more deeply than he could through printed documents into the history of American industry.INTERIOR VIEW OF BAKER LIBRARY...
...change in the required number of courses in the Business School is evident in the fact that students in the second year may register in four courses instead of five. Each study group must, however, include the course in Business Policy, two courses in the chosen field of specialization, and a choice of one or two electives in another field. If a student takes four courses, he will be allowed to audit either one course or two courses, preferably outside his field of concentration. If he enrolls in five courses, he may not attend any other course...
...past years, graduate students in the school of law, business and arts and sciences, have benefitted to a limited degree from the space and facilities offered by gymnasium, outside of the hours that necessarily were devoted to undergraduate activity. Basketball leagues, inter-club and inter-school tournaments, gave the graduate student some means of exercise aside from walking the pavements. But with the removal of such undergraduate sports as fencing, wrestling, tumbling and the like to quarters in the new gymnasium, added space and added time will undoubtedly accumulate for the benefit of the graduate student...
...Cole, writing on the Baker Library strikes at the very heart of the attitude which has pervaded all the Harvard University libraries, when he says, "compulsion in the use of the library facilities ceases at an early stage: opportunity in the employment of its unusual resources persists throughout the student's career...