Word: registrar
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Maintaining its excellent reputation for success in placing its students in positions, the Graduate School of Education last year found work in the field of education for 94 out of the 100 who received the master degree, according to a statement by Fred C. Smith, Registrar of the Graduate School of Education. Of the 6 graduates it did not place, 4 are employed in other types of work, while 2 have returned for further study. Of all the students who applied for positions through the placement bureau 87 per cent received positions. The national average for such placement is about...
This fall the school has 208 part time and full time students, 126 men and 82 women, as compared with an equal number of both last year. Mr. Smith, the School's Registrar, reports that the depression has put a premium on good training, and that those who face the future by training now will find it greatly to their advantage...
...Long prodded Governor Allen into a moral crusade against Mayor Walmsley, charging that his police had protected bawdy houses, dice games, other iniquities. As a final blow the Governor, early last week, declared "partial" martial law in New Orleans, marched in his guardsmen, seized the office of the local registrar of voters, "purged" the rolls of some 24,000 names which would undoubtedly "vote Walmsley" in the September primary...
Meantime horrendous weapons were displayed. In the registrar's office gunning guardsmen mounted four machine guns on shiny-topped desks. Through open windows the guns were trained upon the City Hall opposite. Mayor Walmsley swore in 500 new police, bought a dozen submachine guns, threatened to annihilate the guardsmen if they interfered with city government. All these martial preparations landed New Orleans on the front page of the nation's Press. The country held its breath in excitement for the outbreak of local war, with St. Charles Street running blood and the dead piled high in LaFayette Square...
...trim, black-haired youth waited in line two days to register for a general commerce course in Notre Dame University. By the time he reached the registrar's desk a friend had persuaded him to switch to an architectural course. After one year at Notre Dame, he went to Catholic University in Washington, D. C. from which he graduated in 1929. During the next five years he taught as part-time instructor at Catholic University, worked in architects' offices in Washington and Manhattan, once won a Beaux Arts prize but was too hard up to go to Paris...