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Show Ralph Barnard Vernon Dieu Carlyle Green Defenders Weber is the typical habitat for the college student of the present decade. As on other campuses the male population flaunts dirty cords, best dates, and unopened books, carried merely for appearance. But Weber men have dual personalities. Besides being campus cut-ups, they are the men of tomorrow. We realize that in choosing a few from so many we will incur the displeasure of some-and it is to the displeased that we speak. Think not of these fellows as individuals, but as representatives of all of the men of the Weber College campus. Here you will find fellows who will tomorrow be in Australia, or on the California coast defending our country. Here you will find business men, farmers, pilots, and soldiers. Here you will find a fair sampling of college men the country over. At Weber the fellows are always on the back rows of classes. Their club meetings are noisy, but they get things done; their note books range from the meticulously correct to the magnificently careless. So it is with their lives-and the lives of most American fellows. Their actions are unexplained, their futures unpredictable. Of America A familiar song says something about the popularity of a man in uniform, whether it is the khaki and olive drab of the army, the blue and gold of the navy, or the blue and red of the marines. Rank on rank of blue denim spotted with grease represents boys training for defense work. There are even a few clad in the overalls and straw hats of Victory farmers. Willard Herbert Dee Linford Bob Petty Bert Strand Winston Hickman |