Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
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10. Nineteenth-century discourses on college government, such as Barnard's, F. A. P., Letters on College Government (New York, 1855), should not be confused with writing about the art or science of administration. The former books dealt with the control of students.Google Scholar
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16. Dozens of administrators with lesser titles have written books and left records far more worthy of comment than those produced by most university presidents. Using the groupings developed for this essay, one thinks at once of the biography of Seaman Knapp, by Bailey, Joseph (New York, 1945), the autobiography of Cross, Wilbur (New Haven, 1943), the outspoken analyses by Barzun, Jacques and Nisbet, Robert, and the graceful admonitions of Brown, C. Douglas. The research on administration by Ruml, Beardsley and Mark Ingraham probably influenced higher education more than any presidential writing, as did the leadership of Edward Litchfield as editor of Administrative Science Quarterly. All of these men were deans at well-known institutions.Google Scholar