|  | Home > Collections > Special Collections > Archives > Archival Inventories > RG04-140
Records of the Department of Political Economy/Economics The Johns Hopkins University Introduction
The records of the Department of Political Economy/Economics range in date from 1892 to 1995. The types of records vary within this time span, different records having been kept at different times in the department's history. The record group is divided as follows: Series 1: Seminary Minutes and Gradebooks, 1892-1962 Series 2: Records of George E. Barnett, 1905-1938 Series 3: Evening Courses in Business Economics, 1916-1937 Subseries 1: William O. Weyforth, 1925-1937 Subseries 2: Administrative Correspondence, 1916-1932 Series 4: Courses in Social Economics, 1920-1949 Subseries 1: Theo Jacobs, 1920-1927 Subseries 2: General, 1920-1949 Series 5: General Departmental Files, 1900-1978 Series 6: Curricular Materials, 1900-1971 Series 7: Sponsored Projects, 1915-1995 Subseries 1: Sponsored Projects, 1915-1979 Subseries 2: Grants and Proposals, 1969-1995 Series 8: Former Faculty, 1942-1981 Series 9: General Student Records, 1908-1978 Series 10: Former Students, 1909-1991 Subseries 1: Admissions Cards, 1969-1975 Subseries 2: Students Who Received the M.A., 1911-1981 Subseries 3: Students Who Received No Degree, 1923-1981 Subseries 4: Students Who Received the M.A., 1973-1988 Subseries 5: Students Who Received the Ph.D., 1896-1981 Subseries 6: Candidates for Ph.D. who received no degree, 1975-1991 Series 11: University Activities, 1914-1969 Series 12: Professional Activities, 1916-1970 Series 13: Economics Tract Reprint Series, 1907-1936 The records are mostly those of the chairmen, especially Jacob Hollander, G. Heberton Evans, Carl Christ, and Edwin Mills, and are most often in the form of correspondence. Correspondents include administrators, faculty and students within the University, and economists with the government and other universities, officials of professional organizations, and government officials from outside the University. Student admissions, in addition to correspondence, include worksheets and admissions cards. The Gradebooks and Seminary Minutes are bound or in notebooks. The record group reflects the development of the department and illustrates the many different types of activities carried on therein. Basic administrative functions such as admissions of graduate students, and the hiring of faculty are well-documented, as are some long-term projects carried out under the auspices of the department such as the Hutzler Collection of Economic Classics, the Trade Union Collection, the Economics Tracts Reprints, the Lessing-Rosenthal Fund and the Schools of Business and Social Economics. The direction that research in the department has taken since 1950 is conveyed through the applications and descriptions for grant-funded research projects; such organizations as the Ford Foundation and the National Science Foundation have been important in this aspect of the department's work. The records of the Rockefeller Foundation's grant for Visiting Professors in the 1950s further illustrates trends within the department in regards to teaching and research. Accession Numbers: 79.36, 82.32, 95.25, 95.31, 96.6 Provenance: Series 2, 3 and 4 were part of the Library's University History Collection (largely assembled by Librarian John C. French). They were transferred to the Archives in November 1972 by Dr. Morgan Pritchett of the Library. Series 1 and 5-12 were transferred by the Department of Political Economy to the Archives. Size: 24.833 cubic feet (12 records center boxes and 38.5 document cases) Citation: The Ferdinand Hamburger Archives of The Johns Hopkins University, Record Group Number 04.140, Department of Political Economy, series number and title, subseries number and title, file title and inclusive dates. Restrictions: Administrative records in series 5 are restricted for twenty-five years from their date of creation. Education records in series 9 and 10, as defined by the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act, as well as employment records in series 8, are also restricted. For details, see Regulations Governing Access to Restricted Records, at the front of each binder. History
The earliest instruction in political economy at Johns Hopkins was a series of public lectures by economist Francis A. Walker, a guest at the University during 1877-1878. The first faculty member to teach the subject was historian Herbert Baxter Adams, then Associate in the Department of History and Politics, who offered an introductory course in the spring of 1879. In the spring of 1880 Henry Carter Adams was appointed to give a course on money and banking and a series of public lectures on national debts. H. C. Adams had received Hopkins's first Ph.D. in political economy in 1878. Adams stayed on as an instructor for only a year, and Richard T. Ely was appointed to take his place in the fall of 1881. Within the Department of History and Politics, Ely had chief responsibility for instruction in political economy. He emphasized a historical approach to political economy, and was greatly interested in American and European labor movements. His interest in labor movements left its mark: labor-related issues and topics were a primary focus of research for the next fifty years. His criticisms of American corporations and laissez-faire government policies, however, made him a controversial figure during his tenure. His chief opponent within the University was Simon Newcomb, Professor of Mathematics, who adhered to the views of the European mathematical school of political economy. Ely and Newcomb publicly criticized each other's statements and writings for several years during the 1880s. At the beginning of the 1880s, Ely and his graduate students formed part of the Seminary of History and Politics, which was directed by Herbert Baxter Adams. Since Adams was primarily an American historian, the seminary work of the political economy group focused on American economic history. The Johns Hopkins University Studies in Historical and Political Science, a serial begun by Adams in 1882, included contributions from Ely and his political economy students. In addition to his work in the History and Politics Seminary, Ely gave lecture courses for graduate and undergraduate students on such topics as the history of political economy, finance, and administration. In 1885 Ely organized the American Economic Association. Its journal, the Publications of the American Economic Association, immediately began to accept monographs by Ely's graduate students. By 1886, political economy was a required subject for undergraduate majors in history and political science, and a three year graduate program in political economy and history had formally been devised. The sixth volume of the Studies (1888), entitled History of Cooperation in the United States, was entirely the work of political economy professors and graduate students. In that year, 38 graduate and 95 undergraduate students took courses in political economy, and in 1889-1890 the scope of offerings was broadened. A course entitled "Select Topics in Social Science" was given by four Hopkins and seven outside lecturers. Dr. E. R. L. Gould of the U. S. Labor Department gave courses on "Social Statistics" and on "The Family and Social Life." A. G. Warner, General Secretary of the Charity Organization Society of Baltimore, lectured on "Charities." Ely himself lectured on "Certain Social Problems Relating to American Cities." Seminary members undertook a study of Baltimore's charitable institutions. In 1891, 10 years after Ely arrived at Hopkins, the Economic Conference, which had begun in 1889 as the economics subdivision of the History and Politics Seminary, began to meet as a separate and distinct section. When Ely resigned in 1892, Sidney Sherwood was appointed to the faculty. Sherwood led the Economic Conference, and a variety of special guest lecturers were used to enrich the curriculum. Among the visiting lecturers in the early 1890s were Drs. Warner and Gould, John B. Clark of Amherst, and Professors Newcomb and H. C. Adams. A field work course for the study of Baltimore's charity and corrections institutions was also conducted. In 1895, new University regulations required that all under- graduates do some work in political economy. The fifteenth volume of the Studies (1896-1897) was again the work of the political economy faculty and graduate students, consisting of studies in economic history and the history of economics. The newly designated Economics Seminary began meeting in 1898. The following year, it inaugurated a series of studies on "Commerce and Commercial Policy of the United States." At the same time, the faculty maintained its interest in what was then variously known as "Social Economics" or "Practical Sociology," and offered a course on "Public Aid, Charity, and Correction." Although the faculty in political economy had been gaining progressively more autonomy, the discipline remained under the administration of the Department of History and Politics until the death of Herbert Baxter Adams in 1901. Since Professor Sherwood also died at that time, Associate Professor Jacob H. Hollander was appointed the first Director of the Department of Political Economy. Hollander had joined the Political Economy faculty in 1894 and quickly gained attention by discovering, editing, and publishing some previously unknown letters of David Ricardo. In 1899 Hollander was appointed U. S. Special Commissioner to Puerto Rico to introduce a system of taxation, and during 1900-1901 he served as the first Treasurer of Puerto Rico. When Hollander took over the Department in the fall of 1901, the full-time political economy faculty consisted of himself and George E. Barnett, who had been a graduate student under Hollander. Hollander led the Economic Seminary and gave graduate courses in "U. S. Fiscal Policy" and "The Development of Economic Theories Since Adam Smith." Barnett taught "Elements of Statistics" to graduates and undergraduates. Together, they revised the undergraduate political economy curriculum to suit the different needs of majors, minors, and those merely fulfilling a minimum requirement. During Hollander's first year as Director, the Department received unexpected financial support for its long-standing interest in labor issues. An anonymous Baltimore citizen provided the University with $1500 for an investigation of the "history, activities, and influence of labor organizations in the United States." The funds allowed for the purchase of books, journals, and other research materials, and the Economic Seminary was given charge of the project as of the 1902-1903 term. Contributions from the original donor continued over the next decade, and labor issues remained central to the Seminary's research work for almost forty years. A collection of American trade union documents that was started at the time of the initial grant was the nation's largest by 1907. Another important gift dating from this period was a continuing fund provided by A. G. Hutzler for the purchase of books; these acquisitions have since become known as the Hutzler Collection of Economic Classics. The department's practice of using visiting lectureships to supplement the curriculum was continued during the period 1900-1915. Courses were thus given by government officials, professors from other universities, foundation directors, and persons affiliated with social welfare agencies. George Barnett was promoted to full Professor in 1910, and began to conduct the Economics Seminary along with Hollander. They again revised the undergraduate curriculum, replacing the tripartite division of courses (i.e., for majors, for minors, for minimum requirement) with a sequential arrangement: Political Economy I (history of industrial development and economic theory), Political Economy II (economic theory and principles of finance), Political Economy III (advanced economic theory and statistics). During the 1914-1915 term, the Seminary focused on "forms of industrial development in the United States" as well as on labor organizations. This combination of Seminary topics was retained for more than two decades. In his 1915 report to the President of the University, Hollander wrote that the kind of training the department wished to provide for its students required "immediate contact, through observation and interview. . . with actual economic facts." He wanted advanced students to "investigate the workings of existing economic institutions," not through documentary research alone but also through a program of field work. A Research Fund was requested to serve this purpose. Apparently, the funds Hollander hoped for were not forthcoming. The scope of the department's programs broadened considerably in the fall of 1916, when Evening Courses in Business Economics were instituted. At their inception, the courses were financed by Baltimore firms which paid tuition for their employees and pledged funds to insure the Trustees against any losses. The non-degree-granting courses were primarily designed for people actually employed in business or industry, although some full-time graduate and undergraduate students attended them from the start. The faculty included professors from the Political Economy Department as well as local "experts" (lawyers, accountants, businessmen, etc.). The First World War wholly disrupted the 1917-1918 term. The department encouraged its graduate students and instructors to make their services available to the government, and Hollander and Barnett themselves served in various wartime agencies. The 1918-1919 term was unsettled at its start but eventually took form. Demobilization gradually returned the students and staff to Hopkins, and the remainder of the year was devoted to topics pertaining to the War and its aftermath. The Seminary dealt with the economic problems of war and readjustment, Hollander gave courses on war financing and on the economic needs of postwar industry, and Barnett lectured on wartime labor problems. The first complete postwar term (1919-1920) saw a huge increase in enrollments throughout the University. The Political Economy Department offered two new courses for undergraduates and added William Weyforth and Broadus Mitchell to the faculty. The real boom, however, occurred in the evening Business Economics courses. The 1919-1920 term saw an enrollment there of 704 students, a number greater than the total of all full-time undergraduates. The evening curriculum expanded accordingly, offering courses in investments, foreign trade, insurance, business English, and accounting. The fall of 1919 also saw the introduction of a new program. In the summer of 1918, the Baltimore Alliance of Social and Charitable Agencies had suggested that Hopkins provide specialized academic training for social workers. The Alliance, in return, offered use of its agencies and facilities for the field work portion of the training. The Courses in Social Economics, a two-year graduate level program leading to the M.A. degree, began a year later with an initial enrollment of thirty students. Theo Jacobs, formerly General Secretary of the Federated Charities of Baltimore, was made an Associate in Political Economy and was placed in charge of both field work and classroom instruction. The faculty for the Course included the Political Economy staff, local experts, and several instructors from the School of Hygiene. The curriculum included courses in "Community Problems and Organization," "Social Case Work," "Health and Preventable Disease," and "Immigrant Peoples." Students wishing to specialize in psychiatric or medical social work received additional training at Johns Hopkins Hospital. The fall of 1922 saw the introduction of yet another program under the auspices of the Department of Political Economy. The School of Business Economics was started to provide "specialized academic training for men contemplating a business career." A full-time, four-year program, the School granted the degree of B.S. in Economics. The first two years of instruction were very similar to the regular Arts and Sciences curriculum, while the third and fourth years were devoted exclusively to business and economics subjects. Professor Weyforth was appointed Secretary of the Governing Committee of the School, a position he held until 1941. The undergraduate curriculum was once again revised during 1923-1924. The sequential arrangement of courses was replaced by an overall selection from which students could choose according to their interests. During the 1920s the faculty gained three new members (Howard E. Cooper, Roy J. Bullock, and George H. Evans) and in 1925 Hollander was appointed Abram G. Hutzler Professor of Political Economy. The Courses in Social Economics ceased after the 1928-1929 term due to a "lack of resources." The department weathered the Depression fairly well, largely due to consistently high enrollments in the evening courses. Beginning in 1932, the School of Business Economics made a senior thesis a requirement for the B.S. degree. In 1938 the School of Business Economics and the School of Engineering created a combined business and engineering curriculum leading to a B.S. in Economics. The decade closed with the deaths of Barnett (1938) and Hollander (1940). As the 1940s began, new plans were being made. Evans was named Chairman in 1942 and remained in that position until 1959. The School of Business Economics revised and enlarged its curriculum, changed its degree requirements, established accounting and statistical laboratories, and hired new faculty. A Lecture Series for graduate students was established and a Journal Club was organized. These developments and others were interrupted by the Second World War. By 1942 several faculty members were serving in government boards and agencies; a number of graduate students did the same or joined the armed forces. By 1943 almost the entire student body of the School of Business Economics had been called into the armed services; activities were placed at "barest minimum for the duration." Enrollment in the evening courses also fell drastically, not only because of enlistment in the armed forces but also due to expanded industrial work schedules that left employees with no free time for study. Such academic activity as did continue during the wartime period was greatly reduced in scale. The first postwar term (1945-1946) once again saw a huge increase in enrollment, with graduate and elementary undergraduate courses particularly in demand. Clarence D. Long and Acheson J. Duncan were added to the faculty to teach, respectively, labor economics and statistics. Long remained on the faculty until 1962, when he was elected to the U. S. House of Representatives. The School of Business Economics was formally named the School of Business in 1945, and changed the degree it granted to the B.S. in Business. The administrative association between the School and the Department of Political Economy ended in 1946 when the School acquired its own Dean and Advisory Board. A year later, the Evening Courses in Business Economics became part of the newly established McCoy College, designed to administer all of the University's extension courses. The decade following the end of the War was a period of expansion, including new faculty appointments, visiting lectureships, programs and activities, and financial support. Fritz Machlup, a specialist in economic theory, joined the department in 1946 and was appointed Abram G. Hutzler Professor of Political Economy the following year. Over the next two years, E. D. Domar, a specialist in Russian economics, and Carl Christ joined the faculty as well. In 1951 the department received a three-year grant from the Rockefeller Foundation for the purpose of engaging European economists as visiting professors. The General Seminar (formerly the Economy Seminary) regularly included papers by these guests. In 1953 the department commenced publication of Economics Library Selections, a periodical that helped college libraries select works on economics. The same year, the Rockefeller Foundation provided another three-year grant, this time for pre- and post-doctoral fellowships. In 1954 Simon Kuznets, then President of the American Economic Association and well known for his work on national income, joined the faculty. Throughout this period (1945-1955), there was a significant and steady increase in the number and variety of non-academic positions held by faculty members. They served not only as officers of professional organizations, but also as consultants and researchers for such organizations as the International Monetary Fund, the American Telephone and Telegraph Co., the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, and the Rand Corporation. In the period 1958-1961, the department lost much of the senior faculty (e.g., Evsey Domar, Fritz Machlup, Simon Kuznets, and Clarence Long), and was faced with the task of rebuilding. A further grant from the Rockefeller Foundation in 1956 allowed the department to invite visiting professors in even greater numbers, and a broad Ford Foundation grant in the same year helped support the research of the faculty members and graduate students. Several new faculty members were appointed during this period, including Edwin S. Mills (1957), Richard A. Musgrave (1959), and Jurg Niehans (1965). In 1980, a faculty numbering thirteen included three members (Bela Balassa, Carl Christ, and Peter K. Newman) who had taught at Hopkins for more than fifteen years each. Richard A. Musgrave served as Chairman from 1959-1961, Carl Christ from 1961-1965, Edwin S. Mills from 1965-1969, Jurg Niehans from 1969-1976, and Peter K. Newman since 1976. Although increased in size, the department has remained committed to quality rather then quantity, concentrating in economic theory and mathematical and econometric work. Bibliography
Annual Report of the President, the Johns Hopkins University, 1876-1968. Evans, George Heberton Jr., Recollections of the Johns Hopkins University, 1916-1970. Baltimore: 1970. French, John C. A History of the University Founded by Johns Hopkins. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1946. Hawkins, Hugh. Pioneer: A History of the Johns Hopkins University, 1874-1889. Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Press, 1960. Series Description
Series 1 spans the years 1892-1962. The Minutes of the Economic Seminary, arranged chronologically, are present for the entire period and include names of the members of the seminar and titles of papers that were presented. The Gradebooks, ranging in date from 1892-1901, and the Student Evaluations, 1901, belonged to Sidney Sherwood, who was on the faculty 1891-1901. The evaluations include names and, in some cases, information regarding the students' academic progress. The Economics Reading Class minutes, spanning the period 1913-1918, record the class discussions. Series 2, the files of George E. Barnett, ranges in date from 1905-1938. Within the series, correspondence is arranged alphabetically by correspondent. Items of particular interest include: the letter from the Baltimore Alliance of Charitable and Social Agencies in which the Courses in Social Economics were first proposed; a group of charts sent by Louis Levin, comparing the welfare departments of fourteen U. S. cities; a Report of the Municipal Welfare Commission recommending the formation of a Baltimore City Welfare Department; a report, sent by Professor Hardin Craig of Stanford, on the results of an American Association of University Professors questionnaire regarding university promotion and appointments; and an essay by Eleanor Dulles on the topic of inflation. Series 3 consists of records pertaining to the Evening Courses in Business Economics, ranging in date from 1916-1937. The first subseries, the files of William O. Weyforth, covers the period 1925-1937, and the second subseries consists of administrative correspondence for the period 1916-1932. Series 4 consists of records pertaining to the Courses in Social Economics, ranging in date from 1920-1949. The first subseries, the files of Theo Jacobs, covers the period 1920-1927; items are arranged alphabetically by correspondent. Items of particular interest include: correspondence with Alan Johnstone, containing Jacobs' definition of social work, and correspondence with Dorothy Kahn concerning the Courses and the proposal for a School of Social Work at Johns Hopkins. The second subseries is an assortment of documents pertaining to the Courses in Social Economics covering the period 1920-1949, including a folder of correspondence with the American Association of Social Workers, including a model constitution for AASW chapters. Folder titles are descriptive of their contents. Series 5 consists of the general departmental files from 1900-1978. This series is filed alphabetically by subject and, within files, chronologically. The records are generally correspondence, often of the chairmen. Items of special interest include the records of the Hutzler Collection of Economic Classics, established originally by Abram Hutzler, and the lectures offered by visiting professors at the weekly departmental seminars. There are also thirteen folders of records regarding Faculty Appointments, which are confidential due to their sensitive nature. Series 6 is made up of curricular materials of the department, arranged by types of material and chronologically within files; they range in date from 1900-1971. The series consists mostly of various types of exams (Ph.D. Comprehensives, and undergraduate and graduate class exams), but course outlines, schedules, and departmental requirements are also included. Series 7 consists of Sponsored Projects of the Department and is divided into two subseries. Files are arranged alphabetically by organization title (e.g., National Science Foundation, Lessing-Rosenthal Fund, etc.), within organizations, alphabetically by last name of the person being sponsored or name of project, and, within files, chronologically. The first subseries spans the dates 1915 to 1979 and includes mostly corporate sponsorships and grants from sources such as the Ford Foundation and and the Rockefeller Foundation. The second subseries is comprised mostly of grants awarded in the 1980's and includes a great number of proposals to and awards from the National Science Foundation. Included in Series 7 are faculty research projects, graduate student research fellowships, grants for broad projects such as a Visiting Professors program, sponsored by both public and private sources. Series 8 contains the files of former faculty members of various ranks belonging to the Department of Political Economy. Files are ordered alphabetically by last name. The series spans the years 1942-early 1990s, and is concentrated mostly in the 1960s and 1970s. These records are largely confidential, as they concern salaries, hiring, resignations, various recommendations and the like. A large proportion of the documentation consists of correspondence, both official and unofficial. Frequently a resume of the individual has been included. Series 9 is made up of the general student files, which range in date from 1908-1978 and are arranged alphabetically by subject and, within files, chronologically. Included in this series are the records of graduate student admissions and financial assistance from 1908 to 1977 (loans, fellowships, teaching assistantships, etc.) which are confidential under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. These files are very detailed and complete for 1956-1969, often in the form of correspondence, illustrating the selection process for students who were admitted to graduate study in the Department. There are also lists of graduate students in the Department and of those students who received the Ph.D. between 1913 and 1960, as well as records of post-doctorate fellows and fellowships. Series 10, the records of former students, is restricted under the provisions of the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act and is divided into six subseries. The first consists of the admissions cards of the Department from 1969 to 1975, which contain information about undergraduate work, Graduate Record Examination scores, letters of recommendation and remarks of members of the department regarding the candidate. These files are arranged chronologically by academic year and, within files, alphabetically. The admissions cards in this series are only for those students who were not admitted or were admitted but did not attend Hopkins. The admissions cards for those students who did matriculate are often in their individual student folders. The second subseries consists of the individual files of those students who received only the Master of Arts Degree. They range in date from 1909-1982, but are concentrated in the 1940s and onward. Generally, the files contain records involving admissions, course and progress of study, financial aid, recommendations for employment, samples of student work, and grant and fellowship applications and recommendations. The third subseries contains the records of students who did not receive degrees, arranged in the same manner as those who received the M.A.; this subseries contains the same types of materials as the previous subseries, spanning the years 1912-1981. The fourth subseries contains records of students who received the Master's degree. Though these documents are identical in nature to those found in subseries 2, they have not been interfiled for logistical reasons. The fifth subseries, pertaining to those students who did complete the Ph.D., contains the same types of records as the previous two groups. Here, however, the documentation and correspondence concerning the final Oral examination and the conferring of the Doctoral degree have also been included. The sixth subseries contains the records and transcripts (ranging in date from 1975 to 1991) of students who were candidates for the Ph.D. at Hopkins but were terminated before completion of their studies, either for financial, academic or personal reasons. Files in series 10 extend from the 1890s to the early 1990's. Series 11 is made up of the records of University Activities in which the Department participated, such as the Committee on Social Economics, the Public Affairs Committee and the Long Range Planning Committee. These files range in date from 1914-1969, although almost all the records date from 1959-1969. The records are filed alphabetically by subject and, within file folders, chronologically; they usually take the form of memoranda or correspondence. Series 12 consists of activities within economic professional organizations in which the Department took part. Spanning the years 1916-1970, the series includes lists of Ph.D. candidates sent to the American Economic Review for those years, as well as information sent on for the "Notes" section of the journal. Also included are correspondence and memoranda concerning the National Bureau of Standards and the Universities-National Bureau. The files are arranged alphabetically and, within files, chronologically. Series 13, The Economic Reprints Series, 1907-1936, contains reprints of works by such economists as Malthus, North, Ricardo, Barton and Mill. ****** Records of the Department of Political Economy The Johns Hopkins University Series 1 Minutes of the Economic Seminar and Gradebooks
Box Folder 1 1 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1892-1896 2 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1897-1908 3 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1908-1914 4 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1914-1922 5 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1922-1940 6 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1940-1951 2 1 Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1951-1962 2 Gradebooks, 1892-1901 3 Student Evaluations, 1901-1902 4 Economics Reading Class, 1903-1918 Series 2 George E. Barnett
1 Abbott - Commons 2 Conant - Furst 3 Gardener - Judge 4 Kandel - Puckett 5 Publications, Bibliography, 1928-1937 - Tyson 6 U. S. - Zink Series 3 Business Economics Subseries 1 William O. Weyforth
1 Weyforth, William O., A - W Series 3, Subseries 2 Administrative Correspondence
2 Administrative Correspondence, A - Z Series 4 Social Economics Subseries 1 Theo Jacobs Box 1 Abbott - Durham 2 Easterwood - Russell Sage 3 Sugar - Young Series 4, Subseries 2 General
Box Folder 3 1 Social Economics, Accreditation of Courses in, 1930-1949 2 American Association of Social Workers, 1921-1923 3 Certificates of Completion, 1925, 1929 4 Circulars: "Courses in Social Economics," 1920-1929 5 Curricular Materials, 1921-1924 6 Outline for Preparing Case-work reports, n.d. 7 Positions and Salaries of Course Graduates, 1921-1927 8 Recommendations/Suggestions, 1923 9 Records of Examinations for Advanced Degrees, 1927, 1929, 1930 10 "Report on Courses in Social Economics," 1920 11 Reports, Programs, 1921-1924 12 School of Social Economics (proposed), 1924-1927 13 "Studies in Social Economics" (proposed volume), 1926-1928 Series 5 General Departmental Files
1 1 Alumni Notes and Correspondence, 1931-1948, 1961 2 Annual Report of the President, 1962-1965 3 Barnett and Hollander portraits, 1939-1940 4 Budgets of Department of Political Economy and Financial Correspondence, 1908-1941 5 Budgets of Department of Political Economy and Financial Correspondence, 1942-1963 6 Budgets of School of Business Economics and Financial Correspondence, 1919-1945 7 Budgets of School of Social Economics, 1922-1927 2 1 Chairmanship, 1956, 1961, 1966, 1973, 1976 2 Computer Center, 1959-1965 3 Computer Center, 1966-1972 4 Christ, Carl, Correspondence, 1966-1972 5 Evans, G. Heberton, Jr., Correspondence, 1945-1962 Series 5 Box Folder 2 6 Hollander, Jacob H., Correspondence, c. 1900-1940 7 Machlup, Fritz, Correspondence, 1956-1959 8 Mills, Edwin, Correspondence, 1967 9 Mitchell, Broadus, Correspondence, 1918-1931 10 Newman, Peter, Correspondence, 1973 11 Weyforth, William O., Correspondence, 1940-1942 12 Economic Tracts Reprints, 1902-1937 13 Economic Tracts Reprints, 1939-1966 14 Fiftieth Anniversary Celebration, 1926 15 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1922-1943 16 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1944-1945 17 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1946 3 1 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1947 2 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1948 3 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1949 4 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1950-1953 5 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1954-1956 6 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1957-March 1958 4 1 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, April 1958-1959 2 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1960 3 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1961-1963 4 Faculty: Appointments, Leaves of Absence, Negotiations, 1978 5 Fellow by Courtesy, Kahn, Richard, 1935-1936 6 Hinkley Professorship, 1965-1969 7 History of the Department, 1909, 1913, 1925 8 Hutzler Collection of Economic Classics, 1905-1935 9 Hutzler Collection of Economic Classics, 1936-1969 10 Trade Union Collection, Indexing of, 1940-1944 11 Studies in Historical and Political Science, Johns Hopkins, 1929-1960 5 1 Labor and Capital Fund: Study of Trade Unions, 1903-1915 2 Library Studies and Carrels, 1964-1966 3 Malenbaum Affair, 1969 4 NDEA Fellowship Applications, 1958-1970 5 Non-resident Seminary Lectures, 1908-1915 6 Planning Documents, 1938, 1965, 1967 7 Political Economy Club. c. 1955-1960 8 Remodeling of the Seminary Room, 1939 9 Research Projects of the Faculty, 1963 10 School of Business Economics: Curricular material, 1929-1943 11 Seminars, 1941-1952 12 Seminars, 1953-1969 13 Space Requirements and Furnishings, 1911, 1921, 1947-1971 Series 5
Box Folder 6 1 Special Lectures, 1940-1942, 1956 2 Statistical Information, 1927, 1956-1972 3 Summaries of Departmental Opportunities, n.d. Series 6 Curricular Materials
1 1 Comprehensive Exams for the Ph.D. in Political Economy, 1947-1965 2 Comprehensive Exams for the Ph.D. in Political Economy, 1966-1971 3 Course outlines and Reading lists, c. 1900, c. 1950, 1963-1968 4 Departmental Academic Requirements, 1951-1971, n.d. 5 Exam Schedules, 1950-1971 6 Exams, 1907-1924 2 1 Exams, 1924-1929 2 Exams, 1930-1935 3 Exams, 1936-1940 4 Exams, 1941-1944 5 Exams, 1945-1948 6 Exams, 1949-1950 7 Exams, 1951-1955 3 1 Exams, 1956-1962 2 Exams, 1963-1966 3 Exams, 1967-1969 4 Exams, n.d. 5 Graduate and Undergraduate Curriculum, 1953-1961 6 Graduate and Undergraduate Curriculum, 1962-1968 7 Graduate Exams, 1903-1932 8 Graduate Exams, 1933-1965 9 Intersession, 1972 10 Schedules, 1950-1971 Series 7 Subseries 1 Sponsored Projects, 1915-1979
1 The American Bar Association-Contract Proposal; Charles Mallar, 1976 2 Baltimore Urban Observatory, Inc. Grant; William Oakland, 1971-1973 3 Chesapeake Research Consortium Grant; Jurg Niehans, 1971-1972 4 Department of Health, Education, and Welfare-National Institutes of Health (HEW-NIH) Grant; Peter Newman and Louis Maccine, 1972-1973 5 HEW-NIH Grant; Peter Newman, 1972-1973 Series 7, Subseries 1 Box Folder 1 6 HEW-NIH Grant (Proposal); Peter Newman, 1974 7 HEW Research Fellowship; Max Bennett, 1969 8 Department of Labor (Employment and Training Administration); Robert Rossana, 1977 9 Department of Labor (Manpower Administration); Sheldon Stein, 1975 2 1 Economics Library Selections; Bibliography on Economic Development and Growth by Robert Stern, 1961 2 Economics Library Selections; Financial Requests, 1957-1959 3 Ford Foundation Faculty Grant; Joseph Ascheim, 1958-1959 4 Ford Foundation Faculty Grant (Economic Growth and Development); Simon Kuznets, 1954-1960 5 Ford Foundation Faculty Grant; Fritz Machlup, 1959 6 Ford Foundation Faculty Grant; Mark Perlman, 1963 7 Ford Foundation Faculty Grant for Problem Oriented Research, 1957-1963 8 Ford Foundation Faculty Research Fellowship and Doctoral Fellowship, 1965 9 Ford Foundation Faculty Research Fellowship and Doctoral Fellowship (Economic Development and Administration), 1951 10 Lessing Rosenthal Fund for Economic Research, 1915, 1928-1950 11 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Anni Bielogurkas, 1941-1943 12 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Roy J. Bullock, 1936-1939 13 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; John Chipman, 1950 14 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Tom Davis, 1951 15 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Carl T. Devine, 1951 16 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Economics Tracts Reprints, 1934-1939 17 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; G. Heberton Evans, 1937-1941 18 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; G. Heberton Evans, 1943-1946 19 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; William Giloane, 1939 20 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Gertrude Guyton, 1942 21 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Charles A. Hale, 1939-1940 22 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Norman S. Heaney, 1938-1943 23 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; W. Braddock Hickman, 1935 24 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Harold H. Hutcheson, 1934-1938 25 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Incidental Research Expenses, 1950-1951 26 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Leonard Kamsky, 1949 27 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Philip Turner King, 1940 28 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Virginia Kyner, 1943 29 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Russell C. Larcom, 1936-1937 30 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Joel Levy, 1950 31 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; John A. Loftus, 1938 32 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Joseph E. Loftus, 1940 33 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Clarence D. Long, 1947 34 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Fritz Machlup, 1948 35 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Theodose Moglinitsky, 1930 36 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Edith Penrose, 1949-1951 37 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; H. Edwin Peters, 1934 Series 7, Subseries 1 Box Folder 2 38 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Leo Philips, 1940-1941 39 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Adamantia Pollis, 1945 40 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Recordex Library Film Reader, 1942 41 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Lloyd G. Reynolds, 1939-1941, 1945 42 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Kenneth J. Rowe, 1931-1933 43 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Joel Seidman, 1931 44 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Leroy A. Shattuck, 1937-1940 45 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Richard Stone, 1931, 1933, 1935 46 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Lazare Teper, 1932 47 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Survey of Facilities, 1949 48 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Trade Union Indexing Project, 1944 3 1 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; Mabel J. Walker, 1930-1931 2 Lessing Rosenthal Fund; V. J. Wyckoff, 1935-1936 3 Merrill Foundation Grant; Application, Annual Reports, and General Correspondence for "Growth of the Size of the Business Firm," 1948-1966 4 Merrill Foundation Grant; Data requests for research (Correspondence) for "Growth of the Size of the Business Firm," 1949-1952 5 Merrill Foundation Grant; Financial Reports, 1949-1952 6 Merrill Foundation Grant; Request for Additional Funds for "Growth of the Size of the Business Firm," 1952-1953 7 National Science Foundation Grant (Proposal); Irma Adelman, 1963 8 National Science Foundation Grant; Bela Balassa, 1970-1973 9 National Science Foundation Grant; Carl Christ, 1962 10 National Science Foundation Grant; Carl Christ, 1973-1978 11 National Science Foundation Grant; "Economics Library Selections," 1960-1963 12 National Science Foundation Grant; Louis Maccine, 1977-1979 13 National Science Foundation Grant; Louis Maccine, 1977-1979 14 National Science Foundation Grant; Fritz Machlup, 1959 15 National Science Foundation Grant; Richard Musgrave, 1959 16 National Science Foundation Grant; Jurg Niehans, 1974-1977 4 1 Office of Economic Research, Department of Commerce, Trent Bertrand, c. 1975 2 Population Council Grant, Peter Newman, 1974-1975 3 Rockefeller Foundation Grant, Economics Library Selections, 1960-1964 4 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, T. S. Ashton, 1951-1955 5 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Budgets and Correspondence with the Foundation, 1957-1963 6 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Correspondence and Prospective Appointments, 1951-1960 7 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, P. Sargent Florence, 1957-1959 8 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Shinichi Ichimura, 1958-1960 9 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Carl Iversen, 1952-1956 10 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Tord Palander, 1952-1953 Series 7, Subseries 1 Box Folder 4 11 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Michael Postan, 1953-1955 12 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, K. N. Raj, 1957-1959 13 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Tsuru Shigeto, 1957-1961 14 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, N. V. Sovani, 1957-1961 15 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Richard Stone, 1947-1953 16 Rockefeller Foundation Grant for Visiting Professors, Ralph Turvey, 1952-1954 17 Rockefeller Foundation Research Guidance Fellowship, 1957 18 Rockefeller Foundation Research Guidance Fellowship Applicants, 1954-1957 19 Rockefeller Foundation Research Guidance Fellowship I. C. R. Byatt, 1957 20 Rockefeller Foundation Research Guidance Fellowship Boris P. Pesek, 1956 21 Rockefeller Foundation Research Guidance Fellowship W. E. G. Saltar, 1955 22 Rockefeller Foundation Research Guidance Fellowship Paul Streeton, 1955-1957 23 Volker Fund, Economics Library Selections, 1953-1958 Series 7, Subseries 2 Grants and Proposals, 1969-1995
5 1 Balassa, Bela. International Research and Exchange Board 2 Balassa, Bela (Irex). Re: Dr. Otto Gado 3 Balassa, Bela. Proposal - Statements, 1969-1974 4 Bates, Charles E. NSF proposal (proposed start date 7/1/89) 5 Bizer, David S. NSF proposal (proposed start date 9/1/90) 6 Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation budget, 9/1/90 to 8/31/91 7 Blough, Stephen. Lilly Project, 9/1/91 to 5/31/92 8 Cantor, Richard M. Dissertation proposal "Wage Indexation and Alternative Labor Market Arrangements" (9/1/82) 9 Carrington, William. Upjohn Institute proposal (7/1/91 to 7/1/92) 10 Chew, Soo Hong. NSF award for "Decision Making Under Uncertainty" (7/1/86 to 8/31/88) 11 Chew, Soo Hong. Consultantship - 8/15/86 to 4/16/87 12 Chew, Soo Hong. NSF award for "Non-expected Utility Theories:Axiomatizations and Applications" (7/1/88 to7/1/89) 13 Christ, Carl F. NSF award for "Dynamic Effects of a Model of the Effects of Monetary, Fiscal, and Exchange-Rate Policy upon Real Income, Inflation, Interest Rates and the Balance of Payments" (11/1/80 to 10/31/83) 14 Consolidated Gifts - Statements, 7/1/78 through 9/14/89 15 Haltiwanger, John (with Waldman, Michael). NSF proposal "Responders vs. Non-responders: A New Perspective on Heterogeneity" (proposed start date 7/1/87) 16 Hamilton, Bruce. Application for federal funds for "Determinants and Consequences of the Public-Private School Choice" (proposed dates from 9/83 to 8/84) 17 Hamilton, Bruce. NSF proposal (proposed start date 7/1/89) Series 7, Subseries 2
Box Folder 5 18 Harrington, Joseph E., Jr. NSF proposal (proposed start date 6/1/89) 19 Karni, Edi. NSF proposal (proposed start date 7/1/91) 20 Karni, Edi. NSF budget information - 8/87 through 1/89 21 Karni, Edi. NSF proposal "Fixed Preferences and Changing Tastes: A New Approach to Consumer Theory" (proposed start date 7/1/89) 22 Karni, Edi. NSF proposal "Uncertain Lifetime, Old Age Security and Population Growth" (proposed start date 7/1/86) 23 Karni, Edi. NSF proposal "Risk Aversion, Life Insurance and Optimal Lifetime Consumption Plans" (proposed start date 7/1/82) 24 Karni, Edi (and Zilcha, Itzhak). NSF correspondences - 7/15/84 to 6/30/85 25 Karni, Edi (and Safra, Zvi). NSF proposal "Economic Consequences of Nonexpected Utility: A Game Theoretical Approach" (proposed start date 7/1/87) 26 Kawai, Masahiro and Zilcha, Itzhak. Research grant application, 8/1/84. 27 Khan, M. Ali. NSF proposal "Sequential Decision-Making and the Allocation of Resources" (proposed start date 7/1/89) 28 Maccini, Louis and Haltiwanger, John. Paid accounts, 1983 29 Maccini, Louis and Haltiwanger, John. NSF proposal "Inventories and Lay-offs over the Business Cycle" (proposed start date 9/1/84) 30 Maccini, Louis and Haltiwanger, John. NSF proposal "An Empirical Analysis of Inventories and Labor Input Variables over the Business Cycle" (proposed start date 7/1/85) 31 Maccini, Louis. NSF budget for "Empirical Work on Unsettled Issues of Inventory Research" (from 11/15/93 to 10/31/95) 32 Mueser, Peter. Proposal "Integrated Analysis of Spatial Mobility, 1940-1980" (submitted to the Department of Health and Human Services, 6/29/83) 33 Newman, Peter. Proposal "Demographic Consequences of Malaria's Return: Sri Lanka" (submitted to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 10/26/78) 34 Zame Start-Up Fund (7/1/92-6/30/93) 35 Zame, William. NSF proposal "Economics of Financial Markets" (6/15/92-6/14/95) 36 Zame, William. NSF grant, 1995. Series 8 Faculty Records
1 1 Adelman, Irma, 1962-1966 2 Anderson, Robert, 1993 3 Ascheim, Joseph, 1960-1963 4 Balassa, Bela, 1966-1978 5 Balassa, Bela, 1979-1991 6 Barnett, William, 1980-1981 7 Bates, Charles, 1984-1991 Series 8 Box Folder 1 8 Bell, Clive, 1984-1986 9 Bennett, Elaine, 1990-1991 10 Bertrand, Trent J., 1969-1978 11 Bizer, David, 1988-1991 12 Blackman, James, 1942-1949 13 Blitzer, Charles R., 1976-1979 14 Blough, Stephen R., 1987-1993 15 Chakrabarti, Subir K., 1992-1993 16 Chang, Myong-Hun, 1995 17 Chew, Soo Hong, 1984-1990 18 Christ, Carl F. 19 Davidson, Sidney, 1954-1960 20 Davis, Karen, 1980- 21 Detragiache, Enrica, 1988-1993 22 De Vries, Barend A., 1965-1967 23 Devaney, Barbara, 1977-1980 24 Devine, Carl T., 1942 25 Domar, Evsey, 1951-1958 26 Epstein, Larry, 1988-1989 27 Evans, George Herberton, 1924-1970 28 Frank, Richard, 1988-1989 29 Gaynor, Martin, 1988-1995 30 Goodman, Allen, 1978-1985 31 Gordon, Lincoln, 1967 32 Gorman, W. M. (Terence), 1977-1978 33 Greytak, David, 1976-1977 34 Haltiwanger, John, 1986-1987 35 Hamano, Tadashi, 1989-1990 36 Hamilton, Bruce 37 Hasan, M. Aynul, 1990-1991 38 Hatta, Tatsuo, 1978-1985 39 Herk, Leonard,1990-1992 40 Hojo, Hiroo, 1992-1993 41 Hulten, Charles R., 1970-1978 42 Iton, John, 1963 43 Jaszi, George, 1961-1962 44 Kawai, Masahiro, 1978-1986 45 Kelejian, Harry, 1984 46 Kindahl, James, 1961-1962 47 Kiritani, Tadashi, 1980-1981 48 Kirman, Alan, 1965-1972 49 Klarman, Herbert E., 1961-1969 50 Konishi, Hideo, 1989-1990 51 Kotowitz, Yehuda, 1961-1963 52 Kuznets, Simon, 1950-1955 53 Kuznets, Simon, 1958-1959 Series 8 Box Folder 1 54 Lancaster, Kelvin J., 1962-1966 55 Levin, Daniel, 1992 56 Lewin, Michael, 1989, 1991 57 Liu, Ta-Chung, 1949-1960 58 Long, Clarence D., 1947-1981 59 Lyall, Katherine C., 1972-1980 60 Lysy, Frank J., 1979-1984 61 Maccini, Louis, 62 Machlup, Fritz, 1948-1963 63 Mallar, Charles, 1974-1981 64 Marris, Robert, 1975-1976 65 McCue, Kristin, 1995 66 McNelis, Paul, 1989 2 1 Meiselman, David, 1963-1966 2 Miller, Charles L., 1982-1983 3 Miller, Frederick H., 1980-1983 4 Mills, Edwin S., 1957-1969 5 Minhas, Bagicha S., 1977-1978 6 Mishan, Ezra, 1971 7 Mohring, Herbert, 1972-1981 8 Mueser, Peter R., 1983-1985 9 Mukhopdhyay, Badal, 1970-1972 10 Musgrave, Richard, 1959-1963 11 Nagy, Andras, 1966-1972 12 Newman, Peter, 1960-1975 13 Newman, Peter, 1976-1978 14 Newman, Peter, 1979-1981 15 Newman, Peter, 1982-1989 16 Niehans, Jurg, 1960-1971 17 Niehans, Jurg, 1972-1981 18 Oakland, William, 1964-1975 19 Ohira, Sumihiko, 1988 20 Owen, John M., 1963-1968 21 Page, John, 1985-1992 22 Patinkin, Don, 1965 23 Payne, Peter, 1957-1966 24 Penrose, Edith, 1953-1961 25 Perlman, Mark, 1955-1962 26 Pomfret, Richard, 1987-1988 27 Poole, William, 1962-1977 28 Postan, Michael, 1958-1960 29 Prescott, Edward C., 1991- 30 Razin, Assaf, 1995-1996 31 Reid, David J., 1968-1970 32 Riedel, James C., 1980-1981, 1988 Series 8 Box Folder 2 33 Robinson, Sherman, 1978-1979 34 Rose, Hugh, 1970-1988 35 Sirageldin, Ismail, 1967-1985 36 Smyth, David J., 1972-1974 37 Srinivasan, T. N., 1977-1979 38 Sparrow, Frederick T., 1962-1980 39 Stettler, H. Louis III, 1962-1972 40 Stone, Richard N., 1947-1961 41 Thomas, Brinley, 1967-1969 42 Thorbecke, Erik, 1967 43 Triest, Robert, 1987-1988 44 Troske, Kenneth R., 1993 45 Uselding, Paul, 1970-1982 46 Vishwanath, Tara, 1993-1994 47 Walters, Alan A., 1973-1982 48 Weymark, John A., 1992-1993 49 Whitehead, Donald, 1957 50 Wouters, Annemarie 51 Wymer, Clifford, 1980-1981 52 Yarri, Menahem E., 1988 53 Zaman, Asad, 1991-1993 54 Zame, Willaim R., 1990-1991 55 Zilcha, Itzhak, 1983-1985 Series 9 General Student Records
1 1 Dr. J. Noble Stockett Memorial Fund, Correspondence, 1923, 1961 2 Dr. J. Noble Stockett Memorial Fund, Correspondence, Loan Recommendations, 1925, 1938 3 Graduate Student Data and Statistics, 1957-1970 4 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1908-1938 5 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1939-1941 6 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1942-1948 7 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1949-1955
2 1 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1956-1957 2 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1957-1958 3 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1958-1959 4 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1959-1960 5 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1960-1961 6 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1961-1962 7 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1962-1963 8 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1964-1965 Series 9 Box Folder 2 9 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1964-1965 10 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1965-1966 (December 1964-April 1965 3 1 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1965-1966 (April 1965-March 1966) 2 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1966-1967 3 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1967-1968 4 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1968-1969 5 Graduate Student Admissions and Financial Assistance, 1970-1971, 1977-1978 6 Graduate Student Lists, 1931-1961 7 Graduate Student Lists, 1962-1968 8 Graduate Student Progress Reports, 1946, 1950 9 &nb |