A GREATER GETTYSBURG students occurred in the 1920s and early 1930s. Attrition was high; only about one-third of those who entered the programs as freshmen remained and were graduated four years later.206 The second new program of the Granville administration developed from one of the seven groups of studies which became effective in the fall of 1911. Called Commerce and Finance, according to the catalogue it was designed "to meet the needs of those who do not wish to pursue general scientific or literary studies but desire to prepare themselves for commercial or financial pursuits." At first, most preparation for these pursuits had to take the form of general studies. There were only five courses (History of Commerce, Commercial Law, Stati...