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Page 24 text:
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Mr. King, Mr. Arnold Plan Your Work, Then Work Your Plan By working with many kinds of tools on many opera- tions, a student specializing in industrial education has an opportunity to make a wise selection in choosing his per- manent vocation. Mechanical drawing is the universal language of indus- try. In the mechanical drawing room, the boys learn to know drawing tools, and apply their knowledge in making actual prints. The Shop gives the boys a chance to work with machines used in factories. They acquire practical experience and skill in woodworking, woodturning, metal work, machine lathes, electroplating, forging, foundry, welding, electricity, and printing. Page Twenty
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Page 23 text:
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Page Nineteen Commercial Courses Train Expert Stenographers The constant patter of typewriters may be heard from morning 'til night in the typing room. After a course in typing, a student must obtain a minimum speed of thirty words per minute on three successive copies. In shorthand class, brief forms, special forms, and ordinary words are puzzling, but fun. At the end of the year, a student must be able to take dictation and transcribe accurately at least sixty words a minute. Commercial Arithmetic, Commercial Law, Bookkeeping, and Ad- vanced Stenography offer practical training for office work. Office Practice, a new course this year, gives the student individual and class experience in the uses of office equipment-Dictaphone, Mimeo- graph, Ditto, and Calculator-as well as Hling practice and textbook work in speed building. Miss Podhajski, Miss Covert, Miss Walters
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Page 25 text:
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The Vocational Education Department Combines Apprentice Work and School The activities of this department, which is a part of the educational system of Grand Haven, was formed to answer a need which had developed in this and other communities throughout the countryg a need for skilled and trained workers in the various industries and business establishments. Through the establishment of Apprenticeship Training Programs young people who are desirous of becoming skilled in some occupation can, with the cooperation of the employers in this city, receive a very thorough training in their chosen work if the opportunity for training is present. Ir is another form of education to assist young people in a very definite field of endeavor and usefulness. Mr. Bosworth, Mr. Hodges, Mr. Harris l - , ' 4 H K ,.,t,t ,,,1 . fE1:F?Q4-i, 1 wr
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