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The School survived World War II
with a drop in enrollment, no graduate programs and an accelerated curriculum that sent students out into a world that needed them. Near war's end, the photojournalism program flourished, and advances in technology and the curriculum produced students with new skills in radio, public relations and facsimile news transmission.
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1944
Sixty newspaper photographers submitted their work for judging by fellow professionals in the School's "First Annual 50 Print Exhibition" (now Pictures of the Year).
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1946
A soldier returning to
The Shack illustrated the post-WWII student influx, when classes ran from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and some Saturdays.
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