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Show WATKINSMcKAY(AdministrationUtah's Administrator.In presenting the administrative department of our University, the editor was hard put to get George to talk. He was so modest and quiet, so unassuming that it wasâ€"We are talking of His Honor George Adolphus Watkins, the gentleman whose picture decorates the upper left hand corner of the pageâ€"almost impossible to get him to commit himself, although he has been known to on some previous occasions.George in his own quiet way has taken hold of things this year and actually dragged student body affairs out of the mud. In his own efficient way he has set the entire student body on its feet, righted the wrongs of our autocratic government and acted as big brother to the sophomores and most of the upperclassmen.Helpfully patting Frank Jonas on the back one day Big Brother George was heard to say, "Well, old man, anytime you are really up against it just let me know and I will fix things up right for you."Modest George has really been the savior of the school and we can honestly say that more students of his typewould help considerably to make this place unbearable.Our Own William Randolf Burst.It has always been one of the writers most cherished ideas to have someone on the campus whose soul interest was in bettering the campus publications. A man with ability and discrimination enough to want to see these publications lifted out of the mud. To take them away from factional politics and give them to the Friars. Someone who would take the initiative by producing a publication that was so pure, so excellent in every way that the student body would be taken from its feet right into the fold of perfect journalism.Winks McKay has done this very thing and in such a gentlemanly way that one is undecided whether to kiss him or impale him on one's thumb.Producing a 'sheet' so free from imperfection, so true to fact, and so far above the level of our present sanctioned outrages, the coming of our friend McKay to save us from our destruction can only be compared to the coming of dawn after an especially hard night, a thing that has been done so often that no one pays any attention to it. |