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Show FEATURES CLASSIFIEDS TV GUIDE n OCT THIRSDAY, 1374 17, PAUL HARVEY along the bear river SUPPltVEST TO M MAS EAAtfifctS PRtSlON OV.21 1 The CAi -i 2iS Tri AND Vi V V . M LtADtR GARLAND ill .1 Vs4 I f 1 traditional llomeconiinn centered around the theme The Way We Were. ' Highlighting the week will be the homecoming queen ' a Wc hiiiii I, ;n X in KIDS CARS ON if. J urn r imn flu '" !l " 4M S... itiilii ' ' kmm .VI AMi' KB rt i " -- V x contest, special speakers, annual student talent and variety show, a play at the Lyric Theater, appearance of the Prague Quartet and Anne Murray and Mac Davis, the distinguished service award banquet, lighting of the A, homecoming parade and the USU-WeTexas football game. Homecoming activities begin Monday with the Homecoming Queen Pageant in the Chase Fine Arts Center Concert Hall. Homecoming royalty of 1973. Queen Kristi Vail and her two attendants. Kathy Child and Racquel Riddle, will reign at the contest until announcement of the new queen. There is no admission charge. A special Hungarian smorgasbord with guest speaker. Dr. Nicholas Nyaradi, director of the School of International Studies at Bradley University, will be held in the University Center at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday evening. Dr. Nyaradi is the former Minister of Finance of Hungary. The annual student talent and variety show. Rhythm Rhapsodies, will begin at 8:00 p.m. on Tuesday night. The contestants will all be vying for the traveling trophy and enticing prize money. Students, alumni and friends are invited to attend this admission-fre- e evening of great entertainment. "An Italian Straw Hat" at the Lyric Theatre is a standard in the Comedie Fran-cais- e repertory. A horse innocently eats the Italian straw hat of a lady who. in the meantime, is enjoying an illicit meeting with an officer. The horse belongs to a man who is eager to marry a CROWDS I ase i open Monday j All of the good old days spent at I'tah State I'niver-sitwill fx recalled next week with the annual and 6 f Fullerton. Calif ; Marjoe Stmy. Goh'ta. Calif . 'Second Row Shanna Kerr. Wellsvillc; Annette Olsen. Salt Lake; Cindy Gilbert. Grate. Ida Penny Plant. Richmond; Karen Monson. Salt Lake City. Laurie Hlavcty. Uigan. 'Alan Swainston Photo' Suanne Haas. Lonan. and Julie Merrill. Uigan lgan. USU Homecoming to J cf EOK HOMECOMING tjl Ll N Candidates for queen of the 1974 Homecoming at Utah Stale University include lelt to right, front row Konee Seamons, Hyde I'ark; Anne Ferrin Murray. Kimi Kyre. Darrelene Lewis. Tremnntnn. I)elit)ie Blum. l.ogan: Gloria Gittins, i Jut-- ' MM '1 CANDIDATES Annual liVtS v' MM q way we we ire N 7$ AT girl whose relatives he des pises, the lady badly needs her hat. the officer is in hot pursuit of the hat and the man who wants to be wedded while try ing to find a replica of the hat in a millinery shop whose propnetess was his former love "An Italian Straw Hat" Wednesday through Saturday. Sears ago the Prague Quartet earned its reputation as the greatest of Czech oslovakia's major string quartets and its top billing among Europe's finest Formed originally during the inter war years, it resumed public performance in 195(1 and has continued as a musical legend ever since. The celebrated foursome will appear at USU during Homecoming Week as part ol the Chamber Music Series on Thursday. Oct 24. in the Chase Fine Arts Center Little Theatre at :()() p.m. Representatives of the more than 120,000 alumni of USU will meet on Friday at 1 in the Alumni House p.m The elected representatives will review programs of the Alumni Association, consider new programs, set budgets, call for reports from their Executive Committee and transact the general business of the association All Alumni Association members are welcome to attend the open meeting USU Alumni Council mem- bers, alumni officers and student employees of the association will be ready to acquaint alumni, students and friends with the new Alumni House at 8(51 Fast 9(H) North Street in Logan The house will be open during regular business hours throughout the Homecoming week to provide service and to answer questions Select individuals will receive Distinguished Service Awards from USU during Homecoming activities this year. They will be honored at a banquet sponsored by the GAMES PRETTY GIRLS ON FLOATS Mniimi SI I t tin- i;i i i sMiciation in m! cnler ( room mi Fr'd.i at ii Hall p in The Service Award I tah 'niversity s hml.es! award Recipients are elected l' .1 joint com llil'lcr "t ta( til t and mem dMinu'.ii-lii'- d I i 'he ,il I'lllll ll I..-I- nne I ln III and Murray ia is will inn, il Mac appear in concert p in the Spec Friday in urn Anne Murray is a beautiful Canadian with a voice and personality to match Hav nig loured the United Stales. Canada and Europe. Anne is widely celebrated lor her ll Takes recordings of Time.' "Pin Your Hand In The Hand." "Sing High. Sing Low "i Robbie's Song For Jesus." and "Snowbird " Mac Davis, one of the nation top singer-cotnpos-- i business phe- nomenon he is an untrained musician who can't read music but who has written over 20 hit songs The recording of his own song. "Baby ers. is show Don't Get Hooked On Me." passed the cherished million mark. However. Davis, for all the praise and acclaim, remains the same unassuming unpretentious "country boy" out of Lubbock. Texas He will also appear in con- cert Friday evening in the USU Spectrum nosOne of the most-liketalgic traditions of Homecoming is the lighting of the "A" Friday at 9:30 p.m This evening event is a project of Sigma Chi Fraternity Cans of kerosene are set afire d Students, alumni, townspeople and lovers are always impressed as the hillside letter "A" sparkles in the cool autumn night Docs it remind you of the "way you were'.'" With all the color and glamour of the great parades. USU s Homecoming parade will show off dozens of lloats. bands and more special entries than ever before The USU Homecoming parade, which begins at 10 a m Saturday morning, has traditionally been the largest homecoming parade in Utah. visit to A Homecoming USU would not be complete without sampling all of the delicious dairy and meat products produced in USU's own lacihtics Sponsored by he USU Alumni Association, the Alumni Bullet Luncheon is scheduled for Saturday at to a m in the University Center, immediately following the Homecoming Parade Dining the Homecoming lest ities. members of the classes ol '29. '34. '44. '49 and "4 are invited to enjoy reunions of their respective classes Class members will go through the smorgasUird line and then return to designated rooms to enjoy lunch and a program with fellow classmates USU will meet West Texas State in Romney Stadium The game will start at 1:30 p m Saturday Utah State University Homecoming activities will conclude with the Homecoming dance to the held in the University Center Ballroom on Saturday evening at H;30 p.m. I v- 6 HKCKIVK include Burton W. ALUMNI awards 1 TO DAVIS... MAC Silcock. Miss Thelma Ruber, Evan B. Murray. John H. W'itlwer, and Theodore R. Maughan. Silcock is the former national director of the Bureau of Land Management and was appointed in as Federal the Joint Federal State Land Use Planning Commission for Alaska. Miss Huber. a Utah State faculty member for 17 years, has been a home agent, held 1973 ol federal government posi- tions, directed servicemen's clubs for the Red Cross in Europe, worked with Home economics programs in Iran and South Vietnam and taught at the University of Ohio. Prof Murray has been a professor of economics at Utah State for 38 years, and has been regarded as one of the great teachers of the University. Mr Wittwer is probably the oldest living County Agent in the United States, having been appointed to serve in the Uintah Basin in X X 1917. Mr. Maughan is the director of the Utah State Employment service. Hi .,. AND ANNE MURRAY i.im.ii. IN CONCERT Annual alumni awards recipients VWrV 'vV ?i Jvii"ft J 'rV Vi. ijiimatiti m Mte t't't'-frT- ' PMP EVAN I MURRflY THEODORE fT THELMA MAUGHAN -- 4 HUBER 4Vr BURTON JOHN SILCOCK il l i WITTWER I |