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Page 31 text:
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H Qlimpee of Guskegee. ,D IE' . A A VERYBODY has heard of Tuskegee. WVe have listened to Mr. WVashington, or have read his book 'fUp from Slaveryj' and have wondered if the pictures he has painted were too highly ff colored. The visitor to the school finds himself more than sat- -. 1 .. '1 ,ft . F f' gf... - U -.5 77 Q?E Q2S435i. f . pf 1 - v Nuilii .1 -:lvl ' 1.N 3:11 404 llq ,4- flz .:- fiufltrv- .,:4: 1' isiied. If he can spend an evening there, he will rind every class-room full of earnest, attentive young men and women who have been working all day in the shop or on the farm. These are persons who are too poor to pay the expenses of the regular course, but who are allowed credit for their labor so that after a time they may take up the regular work. Most of the academic Work done by these students is quite elementary. But there is some high grade Work done in the regular course. I Was much impressed by some delicate analytical work in chemistry carried on by a class of girls in training for nurses. An exercise in geometry, too, was quite equal to anything I have seen in northern high schools. The thinking Was clear and accurate, and the spirit of the class-room vvas unusually kindly and cheerful. The industrial work is splendidly done. Every phase of industrial life which the needs of the community call for is exhibited. The heads of the departments and the men and women in charge of the special shops are highly trained specialists, graduates of normal schools or colleges, or technical students. s For the men there are carpentry and house-building, cabinet work, wagon- building, harness-making, upholstery, tin-smithing, tailoring, blacksmithing, forge and lathe work and farm work. For the women there are cooking, dress- making, inillinery, laundry work, poultry-raising and dairy Work. The buildings are large and substantial, all built by the students, and scrupulously clean. All the domestic work, as well as the farm work, is done by the students. The farm contains 2,600 acres, and is rapidly being brought under higher cultivation. The boys learn road-making, tree-planting and care, the care of stock, as well as the ordinary processes of agriculture. All this is on :J
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Page 30 text:
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Page 32 text:
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based on a thorough scientiiic course. i A most impl-essive sight is the chapel gathering, the last exercise each 1 Ab t 1 '00 students and teachers gather for a brief devotional exer- cise One has not heard the plantation melodies until he has heard them sung voices with 1,el.00 more for the refrain. day. V 'ou ,o by the trained choir of 150 il caine away with the query, when will-the boys and girls in the inore favored North have as good an opportunity for an all-round education as is . t afforded by Tuskegee and Hampton to the children of the despised races? 1barvarb .ll A QHERE has been a growing tendency, during tl1e past few years, - for the young inen to take up university study after graduation H . from the Noi-inal School. The following graduates are studying at Harvard: Pellissier, '03, Carroll, '03, Leonard, '023 1 ' 0 ' Packard, '01, Gannnons, '01, Armstrong, '02, Matossian, '03 is at Yale. MacKendrick, Savary, Tilley, and Perry, who have been with us for a yea.r or inore, are studying at Harvard. 'From two to three years' credit has been given by the Lawrence Scientiiie School to our graduates. This generous treatment by Harvard is greatly appreciated and we are very glad to see our young inen responding to it. NVe are also glad to hear, as we d.o from various sources, that the work done by the Bridgewater graduate has been of suehx a character as to justify the credits given. Those who are planning for arvard in the future will no doubt feel themselves under obliga- tions to sustain the good reputation thus far maintained in order that the pre- sent cordial relations existing between Harvard and Bridgewater may be continued, That the work of the boys at Harvard is not over monotonous would seein to be indicated by the spirit of their e01mmmiw,13i011 found else- where in the Offering. Their visits to Bridgewater'will always be most Welcome. . .24
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