Show STUDENT LIFE 150 TUESDAY Commencement Exercises exercises were held Tuesday June 9th The following program was rendered: Overture Opera House Orchestra Trustee Evan R Owens Prayer Morning Song College Male Quartette President’s Report President W J Kerr Piano Solo “Ballade” Professor J A Anderson Address to Graduates Hon C S Varian “When the Swallows Homeward Fly” College Ladies Quartette Conferring Degrees and Presenting Certificates Address Governor Heber M Wells Overture Opera House Orchestra Benediction Apostle Merrill Commencement The following is the list of graduates : WITH DEGREES Bachelor of Science in Agriculture — John Thomas Caine III Logan Utah Bachelor of Science in Domestic Science — Lydia Holmgren Brigham City Utah Josephine Fames Maughan Pet-ersbo- ro Utah Bachelor of Science in Civil EngineerBrown Loa ing— Charles Franklin Utah Thomas Clark Callister Jr Fillmore Utah Ambrose Pond Merrill Richmond Utah Aquila Chauncey Neb-ekLogan Utah Frederick Dale Pyle Opal Wyoming Bachelor of Science in General Science —Grace Fisher Orleans Indiana May Maughan Logan Utah er WITH CERTIFICATES Domestic Science — Lydia Stephens Malad Idaho Commerce — John Leatham Cobum Wellsville Utah Cokeville Wyoming Mildred Forgeon Manual Training in Domestic Arts— Myrtie May Barber Marysvale Utah Mary Selina Morrell Logan Utah The-resAlbina Nielsen Preston Idaho Melissa Dora Quayle Dingle Idaho Jean Simonds Richfield Utah Louie Thomas Logan Utah Manual Training in Mechanic Arts — Raymond Ralph Castro Custer Idaho William Young Castle Gate Utah sa o ADDRESS TO GRADUATES BY HON C S VARIAN TUESDAY JUNE 9 1903 Mr President and Graduates Ladies and Gentlemen : I am here in response to the invitation given me to address the graduating class upon this occasion with some trepidation and much diffidence The responsibility of such an address weighs heavily upon me realizing as I do the demands of the time and place Nevertheless as a warm and uncompromising friend of this institution taking pride in its past and having faith in its future I feel that compliance with the request of the Trustees is a duty and not to be evaded The Agricultural College is as its name suggests in the first instance a school designed to bring directly to the people the practical and scientific knowledge necessary to meet the pressing demands of the industrial vocations Such a purpose is alone sufficient in my opinion to make it the most important and necessary of all our educational institutions But the opportunities afforded by it to the student in quest of konwledge are not restrained within the scope of such a purpose since |