Show Men And Women See Page 3 Tonight's Ag Action See Page 4 Q0&lra Serving The Studenfs of Utah State University Vol v W I' s '' cj V Higek SUSV K 7 A ' j5ir 64 Utah State University 4 i 5 'rt Bv Karen Bush 'CAr No 35 client Show coked For Valley Music Ha ifty 1 1967 BTT?3 - aiiiA 11 January Wednesday Stall Writer For the first time in the of this university the USU Associated Students Deseret his-toi- y rL x' News and have combined ettorts to sponsor a r talent piesentation two-hou- called “The Utah State University Gala” to be piesented Feb 8 at the Valley Music Hall Some 15 student university acts and individuals groups will perform that night when the show time begins at 8:15 p m Tickets will be $2 per person and Wage Scale Upped Fed Minimum Met dmmisPat-io- n The Cniveisitv announced ( hanges in student employee wage scales Tuesday in a meeting ot student officers and administrative stalf The wage scales provide tor the Umveisitv to pav the federal minimum wage for all student emplovees etlective Januaiv 1 The wage minimum will be $1 00 ner hour as ot that date Federal laws do not go into rflect until Febiuarv 1 however the administration authonzed the increase with the start of the 17 MIKE CCOK Wally MONTGOMERY R’chcrd Eyre Wynn Johnson and Pam Doines ponder over the seating plans of the JANE Vclley Music show Feb 8 Odd Hall for USU's "Ga'a" talent new Teenagers Would Avoid Draft For Non Military Activities -- Jieaily eight out of ten teen-agei- s in American high schools favor the United States adopting National Service Program unwhich they would be drafted & der mvoluntaiv service in activities according to a nation-wid- e poll among junior and senior high school students lor conducted Scholastic bv Seientv-seve- Maga-rne- s percent of all n such students polled favor voluntary sei vice Of number of bovs polled in- the total 56 percent said they would still opt Ijr mihtaiy smite less than a quarter (23' said they would choose non military activities as the Peace Corps Medical Cor ps VISTA Job Corps or related piogiams) if available and 18 were undecided such peicent hivoluntaiy service for women "as favored by 46 percent or almost half of the girl students Queued in the poll Such involun-iae- v national service for them should include "tasks of protect-lr- ? our conserving and developing country or those countries wish to aid ” Fifty-tw- more of peicent “an 2500 selected tOWied answered students “yes” to the Question “Should every able-bodie- d American boy 18 years !d be required to go into the Armed Forces for at least one year”' Thirty-twpercent answered “no” and 14 percent had “0 opinion National Service Powell's Still ap Representatives The y Qualifications embattled Negro Dem- fr°m New York whose miltec chan manship was by House Democrats wiS dealt a second at Jfcy blow at the opening Confess Vs denied the seat to tWi a i Harlem constitueits i!"m unfd a committee rf nr b"-on is findings and tie iS ’lse decides whether he ls in of 90th Qualified raillb'nalmn of Republicans 0lli’ern Democrats over-i- n r0l fh!ar ier' an attempt ana e le- te ‘‘Ouse leadership to Punisl1nent by seatmg bile (he special commit-- ooducts its mquirv ere weie rmiiois that if Povv-W'g- resign Heiald R H Fold Hepublican leader usT0'1' 0 deny Powell his ts0°Use vilqMhle lus m seat is tteo 10 Hn qualifications aie llivestigating com-o- unted by Speak- - be ap w MeCoi mn full-tim- ) The Collegiate Press Service SAIGON (CPS) Saigon is most revvoild’s the piobably laxed center of liitiigue violence and w ar It doesn't seem like a city under siege w gu Is isp diessed in soit split ao dai's and spiked heels walk narrow boulevards overhung with green elms or tropical palms In the market old men squat on the curb over a game of Chinese chess Their women are nearby chewing betel nut grinning and spitting the juice teeth through At the Cercle Spoithf Vietnamese and European girls lounge m bikinis beside the pool while wealthy white clad w amors shoot tennis balls at each other on beautifully groomed courts Fiemh colonial In offue buildings civil seivants w ho have kept papeis moving for nine governments in three filyeais go on stamping and difon Fiench in ing conveising ficult bin eauc ratio questions and dunking tea The Iniversity opens a month late and even then no one seems to know the exact date until one day classes break out Young women and middle-agemen wear silk or cotton padoes jamas much of the dav It save time beiausc Horn 12 to 3 in the atteinoon the city shuts Sloe-eye- d yester-°- fused to seat Adam Clav- Powell until a special inves-ptm- g committee checks on hts L (Editor's Note: The following e article was written by for Collegiate correspondent Press Serv ice stationed in southeast Asia As the article was written with a student audience in mind we thought it appropriate for printing in our publica- - — k D- - fivc wpeKs to Positicns Open Applications are open for those interested in pai Pupating in the campus newsreel Photographers film splicers editois secretaries and anv othcis mteiestod should apply at the activity counter in the l’B or talk to Kent Nile Greenhalgh or Colton Gieg Taylor The Associated Students aie intei ested in sponsoring forums debates and speeches on campus to stimulate intellectual thinking and to take advantage of the professional people and ideas at Utah State Applications are open tor a chairman to head this aiea Apply at Activity Center or contact Kent Colton The Iniversity will eall for additional changes in the wage standards whi"h will place minimum hourlv rates at 5115 in l'KIS SI 30 in 1909 S145 in 1970 and S1K0 in 1971 The maximum wage for the piesent year for undcigiaduate students is $1 25 and it is anticipated that the maximum wage for future veais will be adiusted according to the minimum wage level The changes weie announced as student leaders were outlining additional employment fac-toIrought to then attention bv the students The student office! s have been woiking with administration repiesentutives on the wage issue in lecent months As a part of the levicw program Business Nice President Dee Broadbent ami Alan V Matheson assistant to the president are updating a statement of guidlines for employers which will nrovide general policy on wage and hiring practices Student leaders asked that a gnevance procedtue he included in tlie policy statement so hat students or emplovcis who felt there were any inequities could ask for a review of the fac's President Darvl Chase com d -- low-slun- g d icated a willingness to continue to review and evaluate problems and issues raised by the students The Policy guidelines will be piepaied and ie viewed by the Administration the Administrative Council and student groups pnor to its final adoption Gerald It Sherralt program coordinator and assistant to President Chase announced that the ticket proceeds will go to the USU scholarship fund He said that every ticket the University sells will be matched nine times by a federal grant If there is a full house there will be 0 available to assist USU students in financing their college education through scholarships M()-00- The “Gala” will exclusively featuie talent from this university Scheduled to appear now are the Aggiettes the Ballad-ier- s the Scotsmen the University Chorale directed by William 11 Ramsey: Orthesis choreography by Jackie Fullmer the Youngtimers the Sponsor Corps and specialty acts Additional auditions foi the specialty acts will be held Thursday January Newcomers ate often battled by the casual air that hangs over much of Saigon “I thought theie was a war going on here” veteran said reone cently Saigon is hot and muggy It is also a place where war is no longer an emergency condition but the normal state of things A certain percentage of the population has been engaged in killing as a profession for many years and the tendency has been to turn it into a e job losjob A es its excitement after a while Though it doesn't move veiy fast Saigon is one of the woild's busiest and most crowded urban areas There are two and a half million people living here of the population now of South Vietnam The city was built for about half that number it has doubled in the last five years Saigon wakes early Cuifevv ends at 4 a m and the ten great mai kets of the capital open for business A stream of peasants brings chickens pigs lice vegetables and fiutt into town By noon all the food has been bought the central maiket is deserted and rats the size of kittens scuttle along the cement gutters gnawing on vegetable husks and oilier lefuse By seven in the morning main arteries are choked with batRetered little nault taxies pedicabs three-heeled motor motor buses regular buses scooters jeeps trucks Americarts can sedans motorcycles and swnims of five-da- y nine-to-fiv- e nine-to-fiv- one-sixt- h motor-pediea- horse-draw- n The stalls of the “common man's pX” have been set downtown Army ponchos ate spiead on sidewalks and vendors hawk everything from French toothpaste to American whiskey and Mothers nuise their babies as they sit s hold out in the sun or sunglasses cigaiettte lighters tmy little girls grab your hand and stuif a bag of peanuts into it and everybody asks “You cross-legge- d teen-agei- buy? Cheap In file cheap ” harbor port congestion tons of imports for while a few hundred yards away prices soar as speculators hoard the goods that do get through legally or not American GI's in olive diab fatigues hang from telephone poles trying to bolster the city’s sagging and overwoiked telephone systems ties up months Student Labor Relations Committee lepoits to ASUSU Senate this afternoon the first Senate session this year on its meeting with President Chase yesterday over student working conditions on campus Senate meets at 530 this after- - -- The 90S li assembles pieoccupi-e- d Congiess by war saddened by a death in the House and besieged bv Ntgio demonstratois Piesident Johnson delivers Ins State of file Union addiess Tuesday nignt — 0— - group of liberal Demon als asks Adam Clajton Powell to stand aside as a House member pending the outcome of a move to unseat him Negro demonstia-toi- s flock to his support A — 0— The government contends that Bubbv Baker pocketed about $00000 out of a fund of $100000 Jane -- noon and will hear one report in addition to that of the Student Labor Relations Committee One bill will also be considered Student Labor Relations Committee Chairman Skip Shelton and Bill Loftus have been working for a quarter now on getting a written wage policy instituted on campus a gnevance board set up and pay raises for sen- gHT - i IS THIS A BYU co-e- d protesting against dresses or an advertisement for snow unlimited? Wrong It's a common sight of winter quarter snow girls in pants bare trees and a struggle to keep on both feet Displays Portray Unique Fields Displays depicting something unique or different from each of the eight colleges on campus aie set up in the Union Building under the title of “Pano-lama- ” The displays weie put up under the sponsoiship of the Utah State Cultuial committee and accoidmg to Ron Hammond chairman of Panaiama will be up through next week Both colleges and departments aie represented with some departments representing the entire college For instance displays of archeological artifacts found bv Dr Gordon Keller of tlie Anthropology Department lepiexent the College of Busin ess and Social Sciences Among other departments are the Department of Industnal and Technical Education representing Enginering: Landscape and- - Environmental Planning repiesentmg Humanities and displays from Family and Child Development and Home Ec Education representing the college of Family Life The displays which weie designed to better acquaint the student with woik being done in the vanous disiplins on campus are m display cases and on tables in the Union Building Last Minute Worid Roundup WASHING ION AP 6 -- Saigon Report down and people sleep 15 at 3 30-30 in the Activity Center All groups or individuals interested in trying out should contact Stephen Simmons before Thursday for the “Gala” are Wynn Johnson and Wally Odd Other committee members include Mike Cook logistics Rich Eyre and Pam Daines advertising Montgomery and Morris Angell Sponsors Lentcrtainmcnt Bureau The “Gala” is under the direction of Jackie Fullmer choreography William H Ramsey University Chorale Larry Smith orchestra and Stephen Simmons group entertainment “This is a big step for the university in showing talent and what our university has to offer while helping financiaUy” stated Wally Odd He commented turther that Sher-a- tt was instrumental in creating and planning the show Senate To Discuss Wages USU Athletics Sales Tax is IThoughfThereVJasAWar' By Howard Moiled Uncertain 4 It would not enable the Aimed Forces to have the men they want (41rc) City Under Siege tion Seat Washington wise of Program weie adopted 52 peicent of the boys said they do not think service should be any longer than militaiy service The poll taken by the Institute of Student Opinion of the Scholastic Reseat ch Center New Yoik involved question-naue- s returned by a scientifically selected sampling of 2519 junior and senior high school students in public private and parochial school systems aciosS the nation Almost half (48' it of the think replacing the current militaiy diaft system with a lottery is a poor idea Only 20 percent favur it and 30 percent have no opinion Students against a lottciy list four main objections: D It would substitute chance for judgment (52'r ): 2) It would not provide a fair hearing for deserving individuals (52G): 31 It would be no improvement over the piesent system (47G): and vear mended the students for their research and planning and ind- can be obtained at the USU Ticket Ofiice and the Newspaper Agency Corp in Salt Lake he collected m 1962 ostensibly for the campaigns of seveial Democratic senatoi s — o— The lact that Russia may have an antimissile defense is not the only consideiation in determining whether the United States s should also deploy missile the Pentagon says NUTOWL The Geotgia Legislatuie canvasses the official November election vote and moves towaid electing a governor Democrat Lester Madodx an ardent segregationist is favored kill-ei- MLTNAM troops invade the Viet Cong's Iron Triangle but the most massive allied ollensive of the Vietnamese war encounteis only slight resistance U S International Piemier Chou En-lemeiges as a key figure in Communist China's turmoil uiging Rd Guards to ease their attacks on iority for student workers “Buss” Williams athletic director will testify betore senate on the new stadium and on the possible coverage of the upcoming basketball games with BYU and Utah on television Theie is also a possibility that he will be asked questions concerning the possible release of Football Coach Tony Knap Other Senate Action will see Engineering Senator Wayne Bishop introduce a bill to set up a committee to investigate the possibility of working with students from the University of Utah to lobby in the state legislate for removal of the state sales tax in the Utah State and the Umveisitv of Utah bookstores There has been some con travel sv lately over sales taxation of a state institution (booksfoie) The state does not normally tax itself Students are also irked over the fact that patrons of the BYU bookstore pay no sales tax a state cannot tat because church property Campus Scene j Date Bureau Open Soon tlie Asso- Tlie Date Bureau for ciated Woman Students Preference Ball will open Monday Jan 16 at 9:30 a m in the UB cloakroom and also in woman dormitories All gills can make thtee references by applying to the date bureau which will be open for a week The pieference ball is slated for Feb 3 Prom Tickets On Sale Friday Jane Montgomery pubhcity chairman for the Jmon Prom reminds students that the new date for the Brasil '66 concert and Junior Prom is Jan 27 Tickets for the prom and the concert will go on sale Fuday Jan 16 They will be available at the Ticket Office and a booth in tlie UB basement She also reminded all oigan-izatiothat Junior Queen candidates and talent entiles must be submitted this Friday Jan 16 to Pam Steed Prom Student Notify Board If A All students who weie not enrolled fall quarter who want their selective service boards notified that they are attending the university should call at the Office of Admissions and Records Room 8 Old Main h f I |