Description |
A collection of yearbooks from Weber Normal College which comprise the years 1919 to 1923. Included in the yearbook are photographs of students, class officers, faculty, the Board of Trustees, athletics, and departments within the college. It also contains sections about the clubs and organizations within the Academy, literary pages, student poetry, and advertisements from local businesses. |
OCR Text |
Show DELBERT WRIGHT CORA MORTENSON JOSEPH ANDERSON Student Body DESPITE the period of reconstruction through which the Organization of Associated Students of the Weber Normal College has passed during the last year, the year of 1920-21 has been a most successful year. At the beginning of the year each student paid to the Student Organization three dollars, which was used for the activities and the publication of the papers. In order to use this money to the best advantage, a centralized treasury was instituted and for the first time in school history, the Student Body has been able to pay its own bills. The Association under the direction of Delbert Wright, President; Cora Mortensen, Vice-President, and Joseph Anderson, Secretary and Treasurer, has sponsored all of the usual activities and publications. The Literary Journal, the only magazine of its kind in the State, has also been published. Many entertainments have been given, enabling the students to be Intellectually, Physically and Socially educated. MARJORIE BREWER CLEONE LINDSAY LEWELLYN MCKAY Public Service Bureau ORGANIZATION whose deeds surpass its words is the Public Service Bureau. When the student who had been elected as President of the Bureau decided not to return to Weber, many phophesied dark days, but Miss Marjorie Brewer, Vice-President-elect, immediately stepped into the position and filled it in a splendid manner. With the assistance of Miss Cleone Lindsay, Vice-President, and Mr. Llewellyn McKay, Secretary, and the loyal support of many of the students, Miss Brewer has been able to send to the different wards, programs which reflect great credit upon the School. Our orators have been given the opportunity of speaking, our dramatic students of reading, and our musicians of playing and singing. Indeed we feel that the Bureau is as beneficial to those who participated in the programs as to our patrons who enjoyed them. It was our desire to publish the names of the students who sup- ported this most important activity, but space will not permit a complete list. All of the students who assisted in the rendering of these programs have assisted in the publicity campaign which is necessary for the growth of any institution. |