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Show I V '7 - '? . f I r7'i'; v- ' " : 1 M u. , 1 ' '"X i1 S ! t A V M ; T f f ff . f ' t: :'4i- ! i f: n .11 , , .v , ' k -'. j t i t I,,, - mm 1 jAesHk . mtw-B'- - FIREMEN CROUCH around stove which started a minor camper fire in the Cherry Grove Trailer Court last week. More College Students Enroll In Agricultural Courses Now The number of farms in the U.S. may be dropping, but more and more college students are taking agricultural courses these days. Enrollment in the nation's agricultural schools has more than doubled in the past decade, dec-ade, rising from 34,952 undergraduates under-graduates to 72,644 last fall. In contrast to ag students of yesteryear, today's is apt to have a non-farm background. Last fall's incoming class at Purdue University included 60 percent with urban ' back- grounds and 40 percent with rural. Women students in agricultural agricul-tural schools once a rarity-how rarity-how make up about 20 percent of the enrollment nationwide. Why the increased interest to agriculture? Some school officials offi-cials believe it reflects young people's concern for. the environment envir-onment and natural resources. To match students' growing interest, many agricultural schools have beefed up their curriculum and added courses that didn't exist 10 or 15 years ago. |