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Show j | Alumni Deaths i ae Three classes join Emeritus rank ? a a i ‘ * { mpleted October 1981 to May 1982 1 what we — red with | | [ola Bair Allred » }Clyde W. Anderson - ¥Gary Scott Anderson # Marjorie Jean Atkinson Larry E. Beck _) Arthur S. Bingham ) Conway A. Redd ) Kenneth C. Bushnell Richard Dean Child we have | Janean Green Chipman + J leona Whittier Rampton larshign q Pearl J ackson Cordon +s fun ’ J lwella Nicholas Crittenden il world : : | fe given — Duan LaMar Dee ‘Esther Shurtliff Farr Vern Farr it Etta Kendell Fernelius that if" ‘tend to Walter (Bill) Foulger Selma Hawkes Handley ~ ) Virgil M. Hansen | Clarabelle Russell Harris t Brady’ ats off’ | Deborah Hales Hartmann capable _ John (Jim) Hendricks | Renae Leon Hickman Without. spresent Melba Browning Hillam 4 | Naomi Fuller Howell _ 4 Andrew Isakson 4 Garth Edwin Jardine * 7 Ruth Olsen Johnson ’ 4 Robert Earl Keoppel 1. | Jane Eleanore Larson 1 eCollege tah 84408 Willard LeRoy Kunzler | | Robert S. McConnell ) } Clarence S. McCune | | Amy Taylor McEntire | | G, Hugh McKay | | William Byron Moore | | Emma Dean Moss wees | | Clyde Willard Muir | + Dawn Odle Lazenby | | Ralph Gordon Ohlson \ave | _/ Helen Harison Olesen sney con 14 4 Melba Condie Sawyer Marie Davis Proulx 1 list 17 Bernard F. Quinn » the _) John C. Reeder suld |_| Dale E. Owen | | Dusty William Rhodes | f William Edward Riggle lage, | ) John Cooper Robinson ; Keith Oliver Robinson | | Darryle L. Satterlee Vioon 00. Aen _) Allen Dee Shupe Wayne Hunt Skeen | | Joyce Montgomery Smith | — Lowell Pearson Smith 4 S. ie Rodger Thornbury Smith | a Orlen (Lefty) Stuart |* #dellno LaMont Sturm | | Beth Ritchie Sundquist | | Ray H. Taggart its in | 900. 1 land, 100. | | Kenneth D. Worton . 600 Allen Amon Taylor Maurice (Corky) Thurgood _) Dennis R. Wade | | Dale LeRoy Ward The annual Alumni Emeritus Banquet was held Wednesday, May 19, in the Shepherd Union Building. A dinner, musical numbers and guest speakers were topped off by inducting into the Alumni Emeritus Chapter the classes of 1940, 1941 Vice president Robert B. Smith discussed the perspective of growth and change relating to Weber. He explained that those alumni gathered at the banquet represent a valuable group of people in that they connect history with the present. and 1942. A Meritorious Service Award was He lauded the level of support also presented to Earl S. Paul. Paul from the community and alumni was chairman of the sub-committee that selected the present site for groups that Weber receives and commended the group for their part the college. He was also in that support. instrumental in raising funds for the purchase of the site. Paul served as chairman of the WSC committee on buildings and grounds, which established the Master Campus Plan. Dr. Gordon T. Allred was asked to talk about his life at WSC. He said that doing so for him is Smith explained his surprise at the college’s ability to change, which, he said, is significant for learning. In the 2 years that he has been at Weber, the college has taken on four new deans and 70 new faculty members, marking a 20 percent increase in staffing. He “‘tantamount to turning loose a maintained that the members of the bear in a honey house. . .sheer delight for the bear, but no telling where it will end up,” he chuckled. Allred recalled the days his faculty are exhibiting new expectations and new standards of growth and learning as they are seeing the value of raising self-expectations. Mother, Pearl, taught in the English department, and his Father, Thatcher, was the chairman of speech and drama. ‘“‘College-wide meetings were sometimes held in our home,” he said. “In fact, gatherings of that nature in our little front room seemed more like family reunions.”’ ‘‘Weber Family,’’ Allred continued, was a term popularized by President Aldous Dixon. “And I can assure you, it was no mere bit of greeting card sentiment; it had deep-felt meaning, and still prevailed very strongly when I was a student at Weber nearly two decades later.” He recalled his campus days — with membership in the Phoenix Fraternity, college dances, and the Sadie Hawkins day the boys allowed themselves to be pursued en masse by the girls into Lester Park, where they had prepared a “magnificent mud bath.” “They ended up more like Moonbeam McSwine s than like Daisy Maes,” Members of the classes of 1940, 1941, 1942 who were not able to at- tend the Emeritus Chapter Banquet on May 19, who would like to receive their Emeritus Chapter Certificate and identification card are asked to call either Ginger or Sharon at the Alumni Office 6266564 before July 1. the identification card of the Emeritus Chapter cannot get the discounts for cultural affairs, theatre, library use or other benefits offered Alumni Association. by the x a p e toUp! Keecrib the Subs Signpost he laughed — “and some of them none too happy about at.” Without members Weber now has a graduate program and faces, in the not-too-distant future, the addition of several new programs and fields of study which will train professionals, Smith said. He cited several areas of potential expansion including computer technology in the arts and sciences. Music for the gathering of 145 emeriti and guests was provided by Afton Castlemain at the piano and vocal soloist Rick Givins who was accompanied by Greg Fenton. ee Keep up with Weber's events § next year. For. $25 you can §f receive every issue of the [J Signpost for the 1982-83 | school year delivered to your own home. 7 To subscribe send in the order form with payment. Signpost offices are located in the UB 267, down the hallway across from the bowling alley. , WSC, 2110, Drop P.O. ; 84408 626-6359 4 ee ee ee Please send me every issue of the Signpost for the 82-83 school year. Enclosed is my payment of $25 per subscrip- | tion Name Mailing address: Make checks payable to: Weber State Signpost : eT PT , | tt Page 9 |