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Show U. A. C. Commencement Com-mencement Excellent Addresses. Long Program The exercises of the fifteenth commencement com-mencement of the Agricultural college yesterday morning were of unusual In. terest. Tho addresses, given by the graduates were characterised by a sternly practical spirit as befits the students of an industrial college. Miss Norma Justesen gave a plea for simplicity sim-plicity and refinement In the decoration decora-tion of the home and we could wish that her well-developed, sensible ideas had been expressed In more forcible tones, for they deserved to be shouted from the housetops and should form a part of the aesthetic baggage of every man and woman. Mr. Jensen drew for us a vivid picture of the horrors of child labor. Ills remarks bristled with statistics but were marred by bathos of tone and idea. Ills hearers followed him closely, as many of his disclosures seemed ' totally new to them. Miss Jacobson struck a higher note In trying to show us what things are worth while in attaining a perfect realization of one's self. Her address was by far the best written of the three, but was along more abstract and usual lines The three addresses were very creditable cred-itable both to tho young orators and to the college. Then, after Mr. Spick er had played exquisitely the beautiful beauti-ful Thais meditation that describes so well the birth of a soul, Dr. Condon called a'i the resources of rhetoric to his aid In order to make some bombastic, bom-bastic, reminiscent remarks about Ills own student days, the jojs of the farmer, far-mer, and many other things President Wldtsoc gac his report which showed the college to be in an encouraging, piosperous condition, and President Sanborn delivered tho Continued on pave 8 I. A. C. Commencement i Continued from Page 1 i address to the graduates. Introduced M 11 a few fitting words by President 4N ( 'If Stohl who presided over the morning " exercises, he first I h inked the people of Utah for their kindly feelings toward him, congratulated the college , ' on its strength and the students on the way In which they had proflted by their years of study. They will long remember the pleasant words of the kind, genial old gentleman. Degrees De-grees and cettlQcates were conferred 1 onthe following graduates, and the Rev. D. K. Johnston pronounced a fervent benediction: Graduates With Degrees. Agriculture George Richard Hill, ' Christian Ncphl Jensen. Domestic Science Verna P. Bow- , man. Commerce Alva Hanson, Hans Ephralm Jensen. General Science Russell King Homer, Ho-mer, Eunice Estella Jacobson, William Peterson, Eugeno Santschl, William. Lawrence Walker. Mechanical Engineering Herber Carver, Ellis Hudman. Certificate of Courses. Agriculture William Wallace Brown, Christian A. Peterson. Domestic Science Anna Mathison, Norma Fay Justesen. Mechaulo Arts Edgar B. Mitchell, Charles II. Olsen, Alma E. Beck, , , 'Franklin Davis Thatcher. Domestic Arts Emma Frederick-son, Frederick-son, Annabell Fuller. Commerce Junius James Andrews, Ray Baker Curtis, narley Greaves, Lettle Lund, Joseph Alma Marie, George Nehemlah Weston, John De- , vere Morgan, James Dunbar Pence, Wlllard Larsen Peterson, nenry Thomas Plant, Vera Evelyn Taylor, Michael John Andrews Jr. |