Student Body and is entitled to vote in elections. Each year the Student Body elects a President, Vice-president, Secretary-Treasurer, Executive Council, Honor Court, Lyceum Council, Athletic Council, an Editor and Business Man- ager of the major student publications (except the Alligator), and student members of the Board of Student Publications. Campus elections are very similar to national ones. Campaigning, platform making, campaign circulars, speeches, rallies, stunts, caucuses, and conventions go into a Florida election. Three elections are held each year the fall elec- tion for class officers, the summer election for summer school posts, and the big spring election, when all Student Government posts for the following year are filled. Powers of Student Government, like the Federal Government, are divided into three branches: the legislative, embodied in the Executive Council; judicial, embodied in the Honor Court with penal and civil jurisdiction of all judicial matters; and executive, embodied in the President and shared with the Vice- president and Secretary-Treasurer of the Student Body. Student Government enacts and enforces suitable laws to promote the maintenance and improvement of student body facilities and to foster the welfare of the Student Body. Typical of the services provided through Student Government is the Student Book Exchange, which buys and sells books for students, saving them a considerable amount of money in their textbook expenses. The Women's Student Association is a subsidiary of the Student Body. Every woman student upon registration becomes a member of WSA. Annual election of WSA officers and class representatives is held each spring following the general election. .*.4 The famous Gator Band, under the direction of Colonel Harold B. Bach- " man, has many places in it for enter-' ing students.