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Graduate
The stacks in the Library are open to graduates.
Within a relatively short time, the Indiana Graduate School has skyrocketed to its present position as one of the finest in the nation. The interested student can continue his work in more than two hundred fields of study, and attend seminar classes conducted by outstanding educators who were not accessible in undergraduate study. An extensive employment program has been established in order that more students may attend Graduate School. Plans are now under consideration for Indiana's Graduate School of the future.
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For further education
After completing his undergraduate work, the senior may consider graduate school. In the competitive world of today, some students feel that it is necessary to further their education.
Hours of grading papers, proctoring, and teaching discussion groups fill the day of the graduate assistant. He goes to classes when not working for the department. After his graduate work is completed, he emerges with a master's or doctor's degree in his field.
There are coffee breaks; thesis writing; talking to freshmen; and making priceless acquaintances with outstanding men in the field. An advantage is given to the assistant, for he realizes how the student feels while in an administrative position. He is on both sides of the fence—a student and a faculty member.