From its beginnings, Baruch College, CUNY; has aimed to provide trained white-collar workers and to aid in occupational mobility. Sometimes the aims have been in conflict.
Berrol, Selma . 1986. Julia Richman and the German Jewish establishment. American Jewish Archives (November):137-187.
3.
Board of Higher Education of the City of New York . 1962a. By the Committee to Look to the Future of the Board of Higher Education, A long-range plan for the City University of New York 1961 to 1975. Prepared by Thomas C. Holy, director, Baruch School of Business and Public Administration. Photocopy.
4.
Board of Higher Education of the City of New York . 1962b. Education for business in the City University of New York. Report prepared for the Board of Higher Education of New York by Donald Cottrell and J. G. Heskett. Photocopy.
5.
Board of Higher Education of the City of New York . 1976. Selective to free access to higher education: Institutional responses to open admissions at the City University of New York. Prepared by David E. Lavin. Photocopy.
6.
Board of Higher Education . 1967. Special Committee on the Future of the Baruch School. Report and recommendations, 27 September. Photocopy.
7.
Board of Higher Education. 1968. [Minutes of meetings]. 25 March, p. 179; 22 April, p. 192.
8.
Ernst, Robert . 1949. Immigrant life in New York. Port Washington, NY: Ira D. Friedman.
9.
Gorelick, Sherry . 1981. City College and the Jewish poor. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
10.
Kaestle, Carl F.1973. The evolution of an urban school system. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
11.
Larabee, David . 1988. The making of an American high school. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
12.
Lavin, David E.1981. Right vs. privilege, the open admissions experiment at the City University. New York: Free Press.
13.
Rudy, S. Willis . 1949. The College of the City of New YorkNew York: City College Press.
14.
Wechsler, Harold . 1977. The qualified student. New York: John Wiley.