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Show A different type of study of the heart. Weber students in unusual poses. The bacteriology lab has its steam pressure autoclave and sterilizing oven; the chem lab has rows of acid bottles and chemicals; both geology labs have drawers of minerals and rock specimens. Music rooms have lined blackboards usually hung with dancing rows of notes and scales. For Weber students, textbook accounts come to life in the school room. Another feature of the new institute. A typical engineer's classroom. Venetian blinds, comfortable furniture, sound-proof waals, polished wood floors-the quiet dignity of the new Institute rooms is conducive to the meditation and thoughtful appreciation accompanying religion. A special feature of the new building is walls which disappear into the basement, making possible the conversion of three rooms into one large one for special occasions. The vocational building is a veritable storehouse of machinery-lathes, drills, oxy-acetylene torches. Hammers, nails, screws, saws, planes fill the carpentry shop. Studies in Art Remember that clever Scribulus cover with its striking color arrangement, the basketball schedule's precise lettering, the concert announcements, the dance banners, and the club meeting signs? If you stop to think about it, you realize, of course, that the college art department must have created them. Painting an average of nine thousand signs during the school year for the student body, departments, and clubs, the art division is one of the busiest of the college. In harmony with the general vocational aims of Weber, this department offers courses which train the students to enter the field of Commercial Art as professionals. Other available courses enable them to fill lower division requirements for their bachelor's degrees. The department's multitude of activities are capably directed by Mr. Farrell Collett. Signs made to order. Morey masters old English. The best in muscles. Oneita looks to Bert for inspiration. |