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Show Board of Control ELMER NEILSON President of Student Body DILWORTH WALKER ETHEL HOLMGREN Faculty Representative Vice-Pres. of Student Body RULON PENDLETON LAWRENCE VAN DYKE Sec't. Fall and Winter Sec't., Spring CHARLES EMMETT FRANK DOUGLAS Pres. Freshman Class Pres. Sophomore Class PRES. A. W. TRACY Ex-officio Board of Control AS LIEF, with his assistants, guided his small Viking ship across the Atlantic to the green, vine-abounding shores of North America, so Elmer Neilson and the other members of the Board of Control-the student executive council composed of the Student Body officers (Vice-President and Secretary), the two class presidents, a faculty representative (Dilworth Walker), and the college President- have guided the Weber Student Body ship across the waters of indecision to the shores of determined progress. With the unerring vision of masters of the sea, these seven helmsmen have steered their unsteady craft over the reefs and sand bars of two faced rumor, learning each time they took the wheel more of the lessons of plain sailing. Although they could not prevent the ship from veering, they have in no-wise seriously endangered the lives of either the crew or the super-cargo. Through the hands of these seven have judiciously passed over nine thousand dollars-judiciously because this year shows only a deficit of one-hundred dollars as compared with one of over two thousand dollars for 1925-26. Before these officers, members of future boards will dip their prows in salute as an acknowledgment of the valuable new compass the seven have left in the form of an approved and adopted constitution-one that emphasizes the novel in Weber as well as the novel in all Junior colleges. As a crew we silently thank our captain and his two mates that they have sought port constantly, no matter what the weather nor how badly broken the ship and the super-cargo that they have not lost faith. Public Service Bureau WERE it necessary for the citizens of Ogden to express their appreciation of Weber in a tribute to only one of her organizations, they would impartially offer their toast to the Public Service Bureau. That they should determine so to do is not odd, since for them the bureau has assembled during the past nine months, the best of Weber talent in various-lengthed programs. For the first time since the beginning of the college, the Public Service Bureau has had a gentleman at its head. Whether or not it has improved under his generalship can best be deduced when one considers that, in the interest of the college, Mr. Stratford, with the assistance of Miss Tanner-Bureau President and Vice-President, respectively-has sent fifty-seven programs to seven Stakes in three counties which have advertised Weber be- fore some ninety-one hundred people. Although much credit is due Mr. Stratford for the exceptional record the Bureau has established this year, no small amount of praise must be given Alice Tanner, who, as his associate, has wisely counseled so as best to interpret Weber's self-reliance and individuality through choice music and simple and sincere addresses. |