scholarly journals Henrietta M. Larson: An Appreciation

1962 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 2-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph W. Hidy ◽  
Muriel E. Hidy

In 1959 Harvard University, for the first time, appointed a woman to a full professorship at its Graduate School of Business Administration. The new Professor of Business History, Henrietta Melia Larson, was no stranger to her colleagues at the institution where she had worked since 1928 nor to the business historians of the United States. She was known as an outstanding scholar in her field and widely respected for her attainments. At this period of her semi-retirement from Harvard it seems appropriate to honor her by dedicating to her this issue of the Business History Review and by evaluating the contributions which she has already made to her profession.

1931 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 61-71

Soviet Poultry Husbandry Program. J. C. Pincus. The United States Egg and Poultry Magazine, 1931, p. 2.„A thorough study of Russia is, at the present time, impossible. Never-theless, the most superficial type of analysis will show that the Soviet Government has a good chance to maintain itself and to bring its plans to a substantial degree of success.” Wallace Bett Donhaln, Dean of the Graduate School of Business, Harvard University.


Author(s):  
James G. Clawson ◽  
Greg Bevan

Link to Multimedia Whoosh, is that all there is? On the eve of becoming a partner at a well-known consulting firm (“the stuff MBA dreams are made of”), a senior executive starts to question what he is doing with his life. Walt Shill had graduated eight years earlier from the Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at the University of Virginia and had worked his way up at McKinsey Consulting to become the first American partner in the Japanese office. Shill and his family move back to the United States, where he starts to question his goals. For the first time, it seems that Shill has no target to aim for. Having had reached his goals, Shill sets out on an adventure to seek his own meaning of life. He gets into good-enough shape to take a cross-country bicycle ride, which he completes. This undisguised case tells Shill's story and what he learned along the way. It ends with Shill's promise to himself to be less judgmental and to start walking through life with eyes wide open. A teaching note is available to registered faculty.


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