Caption: Book - First Year at University (1935) This is a reduced-resolution page image for fast online browsing.
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Transportation y '/.oology Transport at ii n. — \'\n\- ir CUTi ulum in t h r ( >1 1< f I Business Administration, Piepa s foi mmc-m.d shipping; i«l op< i. i ihij |. ( ilroad administrator; raili ad financial administrat i road rate specialist; insportation sp ialist; ti manaj Zoology.—Major lubject in general four-) ar curriculum in the >11< of d in Liberal Arts and Sciences. Pn-paifor: I idling and rci h in biolog) lOOlogy; geneticist; museum specialist; t hnician in >ol( in hotpi medical bools, health laboratorii and experiment stations; zoolo* national, state, and county conse: ition d e p a r t m e n t s and park servi. s. T R A I N I N G FOR T H E P U B L I C SERVICE Recent developments in the field of public administration in the United States (national, state, and local) have enlarged the opportunities for college and iniversity graduates. A number of educational institutions have made special revisions for training students for such positions by offering special courses nd special curricula for some classes of positions, and in several cases have stablished a distinct school for this purpose. This section has been prepared to call attention to the opportunities available l the field of public service and to the facilities now offered at the University r Illinois for training for such positions. Positions in the public service for which college and university training is useful and often a necessary requirement may be grouped in three main classes: 1. Technical positions requiring training in engineering, agriculture, or in the lysical or biological sciences. 2. Positions requiring training in the older professions of law, medicine, and aching. 3. Administrative positions requiring training in accountancy, economics, w, and public administration. i Checking Study-Lists D u r i n g Registration i
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