Excerpt from College Training and the Business Man
For almost three hundred years the American college has been seeking to serve the higher interests of American life. It has been, and still is, supposed to bear a special relation of preparation for what are known as the "learned professions." Banking, transportation, insurance represent three great labors to which men in increasing numbers and of greater power have in recent years been giving themselves. The purpose of the following pages is to present the advantage which these three vocations, which no one calls "learned," and which the work of general administration, may receive from the college. The purpose is in a way narrow; but I venture to hope that in trying to gain it I have succeeded in illustrating some advantages which the college may give to man as man. For, the great human worth of the college is incomparably superior to its worth in training efficient administrators.
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