| Show l JOINT COURSES H IN TWO SCHOOLS I University of Utah and Agricultural Agricultural tural College Prepare to Live in Peace I WILL START BOOK STORE t KANSAS CITY EDUCATOR TO LEC LECTURE TURf TURE HERE The University of Utah an and the Agricultural of Utah Ulah are plan ing to live IIvo and work henceforth In peace The catalogues of these two state Institutions which are about to be published will announce th t have arranged to give Ilvo jointly courses in engineering and agriculture and In normal work and agriculture domestic science and art and manual training i and to help each other In various other i ways The arrangements which have resulted In this adjustment of the work of the two colleges to each other were entered into and have hao been pursued with great heartiness by the govern ing board of both the university and the Agricultural college Too The strained relations between the two schools have been of long stand ing They probably came about In large part through the almost inevitable inevitable able crowding on the part of each Into the field which the other assumed to be primarily Its own The school In Lo Logan Logan gan was the school of agricultUre do domestic domestic science and nd manual training Yet the university especially in con connection with Its normal wOrk needed to give at least elementary instruction tion in these subjects The university had engineering courses Yet the Agricultural Agricultural tural college If its work in agriculture was to be adequate needed to give In instruction In engineering Great catlon of equipment and Instruction re resulted resulted which the state was notable not able to afford Th legislature two years ago sought Bought to settle the trouble by rigidly smiting the scope of each Institution forbidding the tho Agricultural college to give courses In engineering and the university to give courses In agriculture agriculture ture or domestic science and art and manual training The last legislature after giving a large part of Its session to the problem left lert It practically where it had been left by Its predecessor But the Agricultural college still declares that It needs to teach engineering to its students and the normal school of I the university declares that the mod modern modern ern teacher must be equipped to teach elementary agriculture eta ate The scheme of combined courses In the two i institutions therefore seems likely to Prove the best that has been yet for fort t i According to the scheme a part of the work of the combined courses will willbe willbe be d done ne In the Salt Lake school and a apart part in the Logan school In the case r r of the course In engineering and agri agriculture agriculture i I culture the first two years will be done in Logan and the last years ears in Salt Lake This course will lead to the de degree deI gree of bachelor of science in Irrigation irrigation I tion engIneering In the case of the Joint courses In hi normal work and agri agriculture agriculture culture domestic science and art and manual training the students will first firsti i complete the normal school course in I Salt Lake and will then enter the Agricultural Agri Agricultural cultural college for training in the in industrial industrial subjects The degree conferred I will depend upon the kind of work j which they do In the Logan college A most part of the arrangement ar arrangement between the two schools Is that by which Instruction in elementary ry agriculture will tall be given to the students stu students dents of the state normal school by the extEnsion department of the Agricultural tural college This Instruction will be given every Monday and will begin with the beginning of the school year next fall fail Professor Stewart asserts that it will give the normal students exactly what they need to become teachers of elementary agriculture In Inthe inthe the schools school It will bo be a required sub subject President Widtsoe Is confident that it will result In sending a good many students to Logan to get further training in agriculture |