EPHRAIM At the turn of the last century, LDS Church President Lorenzo Snow refused the honor of having the Sanpete Stake Academy, predecessor to Snow College, renamed after him. He suggested instead that it be named after his brother Erasmus.
With like humility, the college's 15th president, Scott L. Wyatt, gave away the honor due him on what should have been his day, choosing rather to give tribute to the college itself, its founders and its current faculty.
"This is not about me," Wyatt said during his inaugural address Friday. "It is all about this college and its people."
Rather than an inauguration in which the greatness of the incoming president took center stage, the entire inauguration was designed to showcase the greatness of the college itself.
Nothing much was said about Wyatt's life and accomplishments other than, "You can read about President Wyatt in the printed program."
Instead, and at Wyatt's own direction, the inauguration featured some of the college's accomplished faculty as examples of what makes the college great:
• A history teacher who escaped communist East Prussia during World War II with the help of Americans, and who has now come to love America more dearly than most natural-born citizens.
• A chemistry teacher who holds nearly 60 U.S. or international patents.
• A business and technology teacher who advised a class that catered a special barbecue meal to the entire city of Huntington following the Crandall Canyon Mine disaster.
• A nursing instructor who had to give her presentation on pre-recorded video because she was in Egypt at the time on her 18th mission with Operation Smile, an organization that repairs the cleft lips and palates of children worldwide.
With such teachers as examples, Wyatt said, and with the founders of the college who sacrificed much to build it and maintain it as inspiration, "Our descendants and our future students need us to be our best today so as to give them their best tomorrow."
Wyatt said he was proud to be part of an institution that understood its mission was not simply to dispense knowledge but to build character also.
He quoted Martin Luther King Jr., who said, "Intelligence plus character that is the goal of true education."
Wyatt said, "Ultimately, Snow College is great because it is good."
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