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Show WILL GRADUATE RECORD CLASS 25 More B. Y. U. Students Are Candidates for Bachelors' Bachel-ors' Degrees. , Twenty-five applicants for graduation gradu-ation from the college of education of Brigham Young university were admitted to candidacy for bachelor's bache-lor's degrees by the faculty at a. special meeting held Monday evening. eve-ning. These 25 added to those' who were passed for graduation last week whose names were published, make the greate'st class of graduates gradu-ates from point of view of numbers in the history of the insVitution, according ac-cording to Prof. B. F. Cummings, chairman of the committee on graduation. In addition to the 25 who are st'eking bachelor's degrees, 60 men and women set'king normal life diplomas di-plomas were also passed favorably by the faculty. There are still a number of to come up for consideration. consid-eration. List is Given The list of those admitted for candidacy follows:! Raymond O. Baker, B.S., ed. adm., history; Lesli.e Bennett, B.S., ed. adm.. nhv. ed.: Oscar Bjerregaard, B.S., history and pol sci., ed.; Merrill Christopherson, A. B.,' chem., physics or math.; Je'na V. Clegg, B.S., ed. adm., music; Marie Danielson, B.S., ed. adm., English; Ray G. Durnell, B.S., history, his-tory, economics; Max B. Ferguson, B. S., chem., math.; Velda Hansen, B.S., phy. ed., English; Lionel Harris, Har-ris, B.S., agronomy, botany or chem.: Milton R. Hunte'r, el. teach., hist.; D. Grant Ingersoll, B.S., phy. ed., education; Crayton L. Leavitt, B.S., econ. and soc, ed. adm.; Thelma Ludlow, BIS., ed. adm., English; Eng-lish; Vernon N. Merrill, B.S., phy. ed, geog;. Zeela Moody, B.S., el. teach., English or phy. ed.; Karma Partridge, B.S., English, education; Evans J. Phillips, B.S., ed. adm., soc; Glen Robinson, B.S., history, Sanford, Lucille Sevey, Geneva Shocll, Ruth Smart, Aileen Stead-man. Stead-man. Eva Stice, Ida Stolser, Dortha Taylor, Lucile Vawdre'y, Bertha Vo-gel, Vo-gel, Vernell Warner, Blanche Weight, Myrie Wiscombe, Thelma Wright. sec. teaching; Glen W. Seegmille'r, B.S., history, econ. and Eng.; Rulon T. Shepherd, B.S., ed. adm., history; Anna Smoot, A.B., English, French; Vesta E. Snell, A.B., English, history; his-tory; Hazel I. West, B.S., cd. adm., music; Vernon Worthen, B.S., ed. adm., his. and soc. Normal students: Evelyn V. Adelotte, Ruby Bartholomew, Wil-ma Wil-ma Bearnson, Elgia Bingham, Wan-' Wan-' da Bushnell, Marie Child, Helen Clark, Ida Clark, Maxine Davis, Mary Dix, Edna Dixon, , Dortha Dugmore, Inez Durrant, William R. Evans, Margretta Farrer, Julia Faux, Annie Fitzgerald, Vearl Flavel, Ardella Freston, Melba Fu-gal, Fu-gal, Helen Gammette, Grace Gardner, Gard-ner, Eva Gunther, Dona Hales, Helen Hales, Sarah Hill, Viola Holl-aday, Holl-aday, Eva Hortin, Euphamia Hunter, Hunt-er, Kalei Jacobseh, Christine John-yon, John-yon, Erma Johnson, Minerva Johnson, John-son, Alice Jones, Angelyn Lovell, Donna Newell, Leland Nielsen, Myrtle Myr-tle Nordfors, Maude Olson, Zella Perry, Edith Poulson, May Prior, Mima Rasband, Norma Ree'ce, lone Robinson, Laddie Russell, Josephine jury should greatly reduce the percentage per-centage losses in unfavorable seasons. sea-sons. Bad seasons do come, but they are not limited to sugar beets. Potatoes have suffered seriously in production in some localities and in price everywhere. Finally, dairying will reach its best development not by replacing cultivated crops, but by being re-gared re-gared as part of a unit in which both occur. Wise dairymen and other livestock producers will recognize rec-ognize the necessity of a cultivated crop in their farming system. Without With-out a row crop included in the farming system, weeds, certain plant diseases, and some insects are bound in a few years to accumulate to such an extent as to menace the profitableness of their industry. No community beyond the pioneer stage can affprd to overlook the necessity of such a cropping system sys-tem that will insure a stable income in-come over a period of years. Safe Crop If sugar beet growing is abandoned, aban-doned, there is .no other safe cultivated culti-vated crop to which the farmer can turn. Single sources of income are always risky in a 10 or 20-year out- look, and this applies as much to dairying as to single cropping. A I drop of a few cents in the price of , I butterfat would greatly disturb a ! farming system based solely on dairying. Furthermore, beet pulp and beet tops are so valuable as supplemental dairy feed that( in addition to the salable beets, they prdduce about one-third as much feed on the acre which grew beets j as if the land had been entirely devoted de-voted to a feed crop. -In Colorado, sugar beet tops and crowns are regularly fed to livestock, either partly dried or as silage. Here is a great feeding resource that is sadly sad-ly neglected in Utah. Beet tops plowed under makes good fertilizer, but so would alfalfa hay. The proper way to handle both is to feed them to livestock and then use the resultant animal manures for fertilizer. 80,M0 Acres Needed In view of the facts just presented, pre-sented, it is the feeling of the g-ronomy g-ronomy staff of the Utah Agricultural Agricul-tural College, and in fact of all branches of this institution, that our farmers, our farm organizations, organiza-tions, our business and professional men will all suffer seriously should the beet sugar industry further deteriorate. de-teriorate. They are urged to support sup-port in an intelligent wuy this industry in-dustry so valuable to all. Utnh should not plant excessively to beets as it did in 1920 and 1921, but it is highly Important to the people of Utah as a whole to maintain our sugar acreage somewhere between 70,000 and 80,000 acres instead of the 50,000 acres we now have. This means that a considerably increased increas-ed acreage is desirable not only to the industrial prosperity, but ulso to agriculture and commercial prosperity. pros-perity. A 50 per cent Increase in volume of sugnr beets would increase in-crease practically everyone's Income. In-come. ( |