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...Business Administration in 1911 to gather, to classify, and to describe facts about business. The Business School teaches business and is developing principles behind business practice. The Law School had decades of precedents in printed volumes. The Medical School had hospitals and laboratories. Real information about business, not gossip and proverbs, but facts--such as records of output and costs under varying conditions and methods--were locked up in the vaults of business men and divulged with reluctance. The main object of the Bureau is to get precise and reliable information about business for the Business School. An incidental...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 9/26/1914 | See Source »

...ready to be criticized for her good; quite to the contrary. We only ask that criticism come from real, deep thought and from knowledge of the majority and not from individual notions. We are sorry that Mr. Stearns had to listen to "bar-room or pool-room gossip, given additional vigor by quotations from the classics." We wish now that someone who knows what undergraduate conversation and habits generally are would step forward and praise rather than confess and condemn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CONFESSIONS OF A HARVARD MAN. | 12/12/1913 | See Source »

...world spent their time in the agreeable dalliance of College society while they were undergraduates and then in their professional schools would turn to their life work, taking there high rank and attaining in the world of men immediate success. This was reinforced in their minds by the gossip of their elders to the effect that first scholars in college drifted into the obscurity of the ill-paid school-teacher or the unknown country parson. The fallacy of this belief and the danger of this prejudice is pointed out in two of the leading articles in this December issue...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Graduates' Magazine | 12/8/1910 | See Source »

...also of the Constitutional Convention, one Governor of Massachusetts, two Presidents and one Acting President of Harvard, three presidents of other colleges, six judges of the United States Courts and of State Supreme Courts, one United States Supreme Court Justice; and, if one is to believe the current gossip, another is soon to sit on that bench. The first scholars of late years have been for the most part either educators of high rank or lawyers whose practice brought them into relations with great industrial affairs...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Graduates' Magazine | 12/8/1910 | See Source »

...music, written by A. T. Davison, Jr., '06 and F. H. Grey '06, was in favorable contrast to the general flatness of the book. The first act dragged noticably, but the second was more original, in its burlesque of a customs inspection. The "Baggage-Smashers' Chorus," "Gossip" and "We're Engaged" were among the best of the songs. The solo dance by M. H. Green '05 was exceptionally graceful and attractive...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Graduates' Night of Pi Eta Play | 4/14/1905 | See Source »

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