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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries

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To: Don Lloyd who wrote (11787)12/12/2001 9:15:40 AM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) of 74559
 
Hi Don - thanks for the info. I just checked Mason's online catalogue, and they do have Rothbard's "Mystery of Banking" both at the Fenwick library, which is on the Fairfax campus, and in the non-circulating library of the Institute for Human Studies in Arlington.

I don't know much about the Institute for Humane Studies, but yesterday I talked to the librarian on the phone for a while - they have a lot of books written from a libertarian or free-market or classical liberal perspective. They set up seminars and arrange for internships and fellowships for students who are interested in that type of political orientation.

theihs.org

As you know, Mason's economics department has a number of Austrian economists on the faculty, who teach Austrian economic classes every semester. Conservative Walter Williams used to be the head of that department but he resigned and is just a professor these days.

gmu.edu

So I guess that explains why the library has so many of Rothbard's books (I count 24).
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