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1949
School Offered Technical Certification
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The Linotype School, which began as a Linotype curriculum in 1943, began a new program when 10 students set and redesigned the New Cambria (Mo.) Leader. The class, led by Professor Paul Fisher and instructor Tom Bell, worked on two weeklies each semester. The same year, the first students to complete the Linotype curriculum received certificates. The program was part of the University's effort to help veterans develop employable skills.
Students in both the academic journalism curriculum and the new Linotype School learned hands-on skills such as typesetting (top and middle). Linotype operators helped to produce the Columbia Missourian (bottom).
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Enlargements
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Citations/Sources
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