82 Agriculture and Its Needs 



scholarship and the newer industrial schol- 

 arship. Other states have found that 

 difference and reckoned with it more than 

 once. We can beat them all if we will. 

 The State Agricultural College must nob 

 only be sensitive to the initiative of others, 

 it must have an initiative of its own. It 

 must find out the things which New York 

 agriculture needs to have done and go right 

 ahead doing them, knowing that if they 

 work it will get the glory, and if they fail 

 it will be damned for it. Teaching and 

 research must go together. They always 

 help one another. The State College of 

 Agriculture and the United States and New 

 York State Agricultural Experiment Sta- 

 tions are bound to supplement each other. 

 Ithaca and Geneva are not far apart, and 

 the roads between them are very pleasant. 

 Between them they are bound to investi- 

 gate, supply information, and have an 



