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Doak S. Campbell (non-degreed) – president of Florida State College for Women (1941–1947) and then Florida State University (1947–1957) Leon Green (1908) – legal scholar, dean of Northwestern University School of Law, and professor at Yale Law School; Nell I. Mondy (1943) – biochemist and professor at Cornell University for fifty years
Ouachita Baptist University was founded as Ouachita Baptist College on September 6, 1886, [3] and has operated continually since that date. It was originally located on the campus of Ouachita Baptist High School. [citation needed] Its current location is on the former campus of the Arkansas School for the Blind, which relocated to Little Rock.
Pages in category "Ouachita Baptist University alumni" The following 36 pages are in this category, out of 36 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
After the sudden resignation of Edwin Boone Craighead, the trustees of Clemson College began a search for a new president. Clemson trustee and U. S. Senator Benjamin Tillman lived only 5 miles (8.0 km) from Johnston, and was interested in Hartzog's background in agriculture, military, engineering, as well as his experience in South Carolina's secondary schools.
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He attended Ouachita Parish High School from 1933 to 1937. Thereafter he studied from 1937 to 1938 at the University of Louisiana at Monroe , then known as Ouachita Parish Junior College. In 1938, he enrolled at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge , from which he received his bachelor's degree in 1942.
John Sharp, Texas A&M University System Chancellor [2] Dwayne Stovall, businessman in Cleveland, Texas, school board member, and Republican candidate for the United States Senate in the primary election scheduled for March 4, 2014 [3] Catalina Vasquez Villalpando (attended but did not graduate), US Treasurer [4] [5]
Arkansas State University Three Rivers (ASU Three Rivers) is a public, two year college in Malvern, Arkansas. In 2020, it joined the ASU System and changed to its current name. ASU Three Rivers has approximately 3,500 students annually through its degree programs, technical courses, and community educational offerings.