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Show KENT BRAMWELL HARRIET WOOLEY ALICE SORENSEN MONTEITH WOOLEY AUGUST AHLF LORNA CROCKETT MARJORIE WYKES JIM FRANCIS ELTON KNAPP FRANCES PURRINGTON MAE SKEEN KEITH WILSON DURRELL EVANS BERTHA OLSON MILDRED WEAVER MARTIN GRAFF JAY LONDON MARJORIE RIDGES AFTON TERRY HARDING HORSLEY ALTA BYRNE ELLIS SMITH LILLIAN JONES ROBERT MARCHEL DAWSON HALES Sophomores |E, the Sophomores, with the efficient leadership of Kent Bramwell, president; Lorna Crockett, vice-president; and Mae Skeen, secretary, have passed through another year of education, and now stand ready to go forth from our two-year home, better prepared to enter into those greater things which have been an incentive, a goal for our past work. To Weber College we owe thanks for a primary education and, greater still, a firm foundation in the basic principles of life. The true significance of the Purple and White-the maintenance of high ideals, virtue, and character- has become our knowledge, and we speak of that which Weber has taught us in three simple words-service, royalty, and purity. Katherine Newcomb has said, "The only right you need is the right to be useful. The right to be useful means the right to grow. The right to Be useful is the right to be powerful. Power is the result of being. It is not talked about. We do not feel that we have power; we feel that we are power. All needless thought of the personal self is an obstacle to usefulnss and growth. To be useful is not to intrude your ideas of life on others in advice. It is simple, true living, unselfish living; not striving to live." To be of service to mankind seems to be an indefinite aim that is not often attained, but when we consider service as true, unselfish living, it |