The Higher Education as 
a Training for Business 
By HARRY PRATT JUDSON, President of the 
University of Chicago 
“Tt must not be forgotten that no col- 
e can insure an education to a young man. 
More definitely, no college gives an educa- 
tion. All that colleges can do is to provide 
students who wish may obtain knowledge 
and training in a college course whi ill fit 
wider comprehension of society and 
life as to enable one to be useful and to find 
: pe “2 PN a ¢ 4 7 S41 
Watii 
‘J 
A of ench a dnrcatin 
hate A 
college education, in short, may enable one 
earn a living. It should also teach one 
how tc live.” —From the Preface. 
56 pages r2mo, cloth postpaid 55 cents 
The University of Chicago Press 
Chicago - - - Hlinois 
Che Education 
of Women 
By MARION TALBOT 
Dean of Women and Professor of H. 
Administration in The University of yoo 
LTHOUGH women make up 45 per 
cent of the student population, modern 
university curricula are planned to meet the 
needs en. Specialization—to keep 
pace with women’s development along civic, 
philanthropic, domestic, and social lines— 
life in the college period, 
266 pages 8vo cloth $1.37 postpaid 
Address Dept. P 
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 
SEGTIONALISM 
IN VIRGINIA 
By GHARLES HENRY AMBLER 
ROM the earliest colonial times 
Virginia was a land of sectional 
differences, which influenced to an 
important degree the course of her 
history. These differences and their 
results are treated in an able book 
by Charles Henry Ambler entitled 
Sectionalism in Virginia. "Extensive 
research in the archives at Charles- 
ton, Richmond, and Washington, | 
and the examination of numerous 
documents have given the author 
material which throws much new 
light on Virginia’s internal troubles 
in ante-bellum days. 
Mr. Ambler has divided his 
material into three periods, the first 
beginning with colonial times and 
ending with Bacon’s rebellion; — 
second including the emigration into 
the Piedmont, the Revolution, and 
the Constitutional Convention of 
1829-30; and the the third beg! 
ning with the demand of the beet 
Alleghany section for a greater or 
in the state government, which /€ 
to dismemberment just before the 
Civil War. 
Twelve maps illustrating t 
on important resolutionsare 54 
through the book. 
376 pp. 12mo cloth postpaid $1.04 
DDRESS DEPT. P 
he yote 
ttered 
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 
| CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 
