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- ,--4 1 tl Q QQ A ,rival Milford Sanitarium in the late 1880's. The lower floor of this building is still being used by the Nebraska Tech Diesel Technology Department. The top floors have been re- moved. n 1 TWENTV YEARS CDF PROGRESS 1941-1961 Not many people recall Legislative Bill No. 148, introduced during the fifty-fifth session of the Leg- islature of Nebraska. It read in part as follows: For an act relating to Vocational educationg to transfer the control of the institution known as the 'branch institution of the soldiers' and sailors' home at Mil- ford' from the Board of Control of state institutions to the State Board of Vocational Educationg to estab- lish and maintain such institution under the name and style of the 'Nebraska State Trade Schoo1'g to declare the object of such institutiong to bestow upon the State Board of Vocational Education full powers to receive, have charge of and operate such institu- tiong ..... This was 1941, and the bill was one establishing the Nebraska State Trade School in- troduced by Stanley A. Matzke, a senator represent- ing the 24th district of Nebraska. It was not the first attempt at establishing a trade school. During the late thirties, Governor R. L. Cochran vetoed a bill passed by the legislature for the purpose of establishment of a trade school at Broken Bow. This preliminary work helped pave the Way for the establishment of the Nebraska State Trade School at Milford. In 1941, it was Senator Matzke of Seward who revived the idea and put it across, making a trade school in Nebraska a reality. A great deal of work was done by Senator Matzke and under his expert management it breezed through the various legisla- tive stages, culminating in a unanimous affirmative vote. Thus, the Nebraska State Trade School was created on March 28, 1941, and open for business in May of the same year. Its objective, to afford the inhabitants of this State the means of acquiring skills and related technical knowledge, other than that taught at college level, by training methods necessary to prepare them for advantageous entrance and satisfactory advancement in technical occupa- tions . Entrance to the grounds from the north. Picture taken in 1926. FB'
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