Word: registrars
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...information had no other purpose than to facilitate House assignments, the effort spent to compile it would probably be unjustified. But he can imagine several other uses for it, all involved with the various sections of University records. The information office, for example, the Alumni Records Department and the Registrar's Office, could all code data about students into the same tapes used for House assignments--since the files of these offices in many respects duplicate each other. Everyone could use the same file, the memory section of a computer. Needless duplication might in addition vanish from the famous jungle...
...straight year, Economics 1, Principles of Economics, has enrolled the greatest number of students of any non-compulsory course in the University. A total of 727 students--87 more than last year--signed up for the course, according to final enrollment figures released this week by Sargent Kennedy '28, Registrar...
Most of the long evening was spent introducing 30 prominent Democrats, including Peabody's rivals for the gubernatorial nomination, Lieutenant Governor Edward A. Mc Laughlin and Motor Vehicle Registrar Clement A. Riley...
...state patrolmen were there; so were newsmen and television crews. Governor Ross Barnett, fresh from a long meeting with the state college board, from which he had extracted the authority to deal personally with "the nigger," flew into Oxford, drove to the campus, and there took over as special registrar of the university. Barnett had promised the people of Mississippi-despite telephone calls from U.S. Attorney General Robert Kennedy, who had warned him of the legal consequences -that he would go to jail before he would permit Negro James H. Meredith to register for classes...
Curiously enough, I found the Northern forms of discrimination to be more frustrating to deal with, precisely because the concealment of discriminatory practices has been permitted. For example, when I spoke to the registrar of voters at the Hartford City Hall in order to obtain information for a badly needed voter registration campaign in Hartford's predominantly Negro districts, he stated flatly, "We don't keep figures on how many Negroes are registered." He then added, "I have a pretty good idea, but I'm not going to tell you. What are you bothering about them for, anyway? What race...