. College and state . n away from home for theirhigh school training the Agricul-tural and Manual Training ModelHigh School should have particularattractions. The college dormitorymakes the expense in the case ofyoung ladies about the same that itwould be in a smaller community,but the opportunities afforded for training in the refinements and forbroadening ones sympathies andoutlook thru daily intimate contactwith young folks from varied walksand interests in life are incompar-ably better* It also provides moralrestraints that are superior. Theexpert teaching staff, the libraries,the wealth o


. College and state . n away from home for theirhigh school training the Agricul-tural and Manual Training ModelHigh School should have particularattractions. The college dormitorymakes the expense in the case ofyoung ladies about the same that itwould be in a smaller community,but the opportunities afforded for training in the refinements and forbroadening ones sympathies andoutlook thru daily intimate contactwith young folks from varied walksand interests in life are incompar-ably better* It also provides moralrestraints that are superior. Theexpert teaching staff, the libraries,the wealth of laboratory equipmentand the great variety of instructionoffered are generally not availablein the regular .high school, espe-cially in those of the smaller com-munities. These are all features that shouldbe determining considerations withparents who must send their youngfolks away from home for their sec-ondary training, and to such par-ents the Agricultural and ManualTraining Model High School wouldmake its COLLEGE AND STATE A Publication of the North Dakota Agricultural College, Fargo Vol. II. JULY-AUGUST 1918 No. 4 Entered as second-class matter, Febru-ary 13, 1917, at the post office at Agri-cultural College. North Dakota, under theact of August 24, 1912. Published bi-monthly during the address, Agricultural College, N. D. Editorial Board Arland D. Weeks Editor C. B. Waldron I A. G. Arvold > Associate Editors Abbie L. SimmonsJ A. H. Parrott Business Manager No Unskilled Labor The mechanical instruction givenduring the summer months to agroup of drafted men at the col-lege represents a widening of tech-nical training which will mean muchnot only during the war but strength rests largely uponskilled labor, and unskilled laborand undeveloped human resourcesare a factor of weakness. It is per-haps not too much to hope that theday of unskilled labor will soon endand that everyone will be trained forone or more vocations, trained to beskillf


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectuniversitiesandcolle