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...another column is set forth an outline of the new Graduate School of Business Administration, which begins its first academic year tomorrow. While the new school is strictly a graduate department of the University, similar to the other professional schools, undergraduates of the College who have completed the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts or Science, but who have not received the degree, are eligible, and provision is made for those who lack one course of the requirements for the A.B. degree to enroll in the courses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BUSINESS SCHOOL. | 9/30/1908 | See Source »

Prof. Merriman reviews the work of the summer quarter in the University, including chiefly the reorganization of the Bussey Institution. Facts pertaining to the life of undergraduates during the month of June are set forth by the student editor. An account of the Class Day exercises takes up most of the space, as being the most important event of the past quarter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Graduates' Magazine | 9/29/1908 | See Source »

There is no radical change to be announced in the policy of the CRIMSON for the coming year. It has been the ambition of the board of editors to present to the University an intelligent, newsy paper that should be an institution to set forth undergraduate views and ideas in a sane and profitable manner. The present board is full of enthusiasm for Harvard affairs during the coming year, and will endeavor to record them to the satisfaction of the University at large...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRIMSON. | 9/29/1908 | See Source »

Turning now to personal life, Dean Fenn said that there were many specific ways in which a man's possessions might stand in the way of his possibilities. Many a man of brilliant parts has made little of himself simply because he was never obliged to put forth all his powers. A man of means frequently fails, just because of that fact, to become a means for the highest ends. Occasionally crises come in which the Christ appears bearing the sword and demanding utter self-renunciation. No one here, almost under the shadow of Memorial Hall, can doubt it. Today...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BACCALAUREATE SERMON | 6/15/1908 | See Source »

...lesser men. He seems to have overlooked nothing. And he brings all, down to the most modest specimen, into his system. Of chief interest to the American reader, who has not the pictures before him to refer to, are Mr. Berenson's generalizations--the pages in which he sets forth his main ideas, or sums up some really important master, like Montegna or Corrreggio. His remarks on the grotesque, on pettiness, on the modern passion for activity, and on the dangers of the antique--to mention only a few of the topics he touches upon by the way--are penetrating...

Author: By W. R. Thayer ., | Title: "North Italian Painters of the Renaissance" | 6/12/1908 | See Source »

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