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Show MAMAN CN EROS RIMM LEMI SAH At CARERS Eee BED : oR PDA A ELOY RRIF Ned CMON COAT POT oe aad Th ROARED ett) TAYPEP TAGPA TAU ROMS. OD sP OM ED PORT a ELEN PTD oe ENR SRE Seit REO AGROPP aceee * Gee aee UnDF VL. DR RDN eaPAL RP ARS There was no excuse this year for not knowing Weber's rules and traditions. During the summer Janet Owen, editor; Carolyn Lois Daniels, staff, Garner, and Mrs. Marian Blayney, 23 Bh advisor, worked very hard to pub- # 10 mM lish Weber's first handbook. ''So This is Weber" contained information about the faculty, Warrior's F| * ie Pas ae Harmer, Creed, committees, and traditions. There was about everything a Warrior needed to know about the school. Members on the staff of Weber's first handbook Harmer, Daniels, Owen, Mrs. Blayney, advisor. oo at TA Weber READ has mortuary. are Garner, IT a Morgue which belongs in no It contains all clippings from the papers about Weber. Its editor, Lorna Byington, puts them on big sheets of paper for later use. Do you know who won the first Weber Ogden basketball game? Ann Genetti knows. She's the young lady who took care of Weber's history for 1950-51. She compiles all that happened this year and tries to bring up to date the histories of other years so that Weber's story might be complete. There were two people in the school who were probably very tired of licking stamps. They were Emma Hipwell and Mildred Wayment, exchange editors. They sent our papers to other schools and received theirs in return. This way we saw what other schools were doing. Some of our editors were Byington, Morgue; Genetti, Historian; Wayment and Hipwell, Exchange. 163 Lacie ea aes |