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Show Daily Utah Chronicle May 9, 1974 Page Two li Chairman of Openings '74 looks at orientation plans 73 wasn't "Openings welcomed really concerned with participation, just with setting the ground brochure work," said Steve Hamblin, Openings '74 chairman. "This year we're ready to move." The "Openings" program is designed to acquaint incoming students with all the available University activities, including student government and many campus clubs and organizations. "In a big university like this one, it's just hard to understand where to go or what to do," Hamblin said. "Openings is just a good, orientation so can kids figure out program, where their heads are." Hamblin said that Openings '74 will shy away from instruction about registration, grades, transcripts and so forth. "The University apparatus is taken care of in the catalog. We're going to stick just to w hat a student can get involved in and how we can stimulate him." well-rounde- some publications for freshmen and transfer students who will be 74. A accompanying the University letter of admission tells the student that Openings "74 is coming up. The "student handbook" follows, listing campus organizations and acquainting the student with the University. The last "Openings '74" publication, late in the summer, tells about the upcoming activities at the oldest honorary scholastic society in America. The students were elected in recognition of high scholarship in liberal class subjects. For eligibility, students must be in the top ten percent of their class. University Phi Beta Kappa Here's the Original! CLINT EASTWOOD as "DIRTY HARRY" OSH AUDITORIUM FRI P SAT ADMISSION $1.00 Broken Arrows No More, Once More a United People." TODAYS SPEAKERS Browning Pipstem Indian Attorney Contemporary Indian Affairs Myron Jones Indian Education, legislation and its impact OSH Auditorium 5 p.m. T i I I include Dr. Arvo Van Alstyne, executive assistant to the president of professor of law, president: Dr. Maude Callis, adjunct professor of history, vice president: Dr. Ramona Adams, associate professor of social work and associate dean of students, secretary; and Maggy Pendleton, treasurer. Initiates will be honored at a dinner Wednesday, May 29 at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. The new members are: officers John Alsup, Sharlene Anderson, Janeert Arnold, Denis Asson, Christine Astroth, Ernest F Baldwin, Susan Bangerter, Richard Beers, Sally Benedict, Althea R. Bennett, David Benmon, Marti Benmon, Valerie Benson, Garry Lynn Blake.Mae Blakesley, Dorothy Bodell, Scott Bora, Arlyne Kay . Spears Brim, Byron Brown, Michelle Buchanan, Kenneth Buchi. Karen Campbell, Susan Canham, Jeffrey Cardon, Eleanor Carlston, Wayne Carlston, Denise Castteton, Judy Caiier, LeRoy Evan Crandail, Katherine Chambers, Crocker, Robert Cundick, Timothy Dayhuff, Linda Marie Denning, Robert Dennis, Vincent Patricia Dorius, Bonnie Devlahovich, Edwards, Lynn Evans, Paula Forney, Kenneth Fourrier, Arnold Gardner, Joyanna Geisler, Gordon Genfa, Ronald Gibson, Frederick Green. William Hansen, David Hansen, Vickie Hardy, Edward Hashimoto, Scott Hendricks, Ren Nobuyuki Imai, Wendy Holdsworth, Edwin Inkley, Thomas Irving, Judith Jensen, Milton Jensen, Roberta Ann Jewett, Cary Jones, Margaret Kiernan, Vicqi Jo Kingdon, Jeffrey Labrum, Darrell Larsen, Leslie Lash, Teresa Larorgna, Jon Lear, Owen Litz, Alan Livingston, Daniel Lundberg, Jeffrey Luttrell. Marily Madsen, Jane Ann Marquardt, Lawrence McGee, William McGregor, David Moore, Kenneth Morrill, Pamela Morris, Douglas Mortensen, Alan Muraki, Michael Nelson, Rex Ochi, Laurel Oden, Keith Oehler, James Olsen, Glen Park, Ann Palmer, Morgan Parry, Robert Parry, Dean Petersen, Loralee Peterson, Robert Peterson, Clifford Petterson, Lloyd Pollish, Sterling Potter, Frances Purdie. David Redd, Stanford Reichert, Gretchen Rowe, William Rutter, Sandra Sakamoto, Susan Salisbury, Patricia Sato, Kathi Satterwhite, Richard Scheibe, Kathie Scott, John Sharp, Bryan Smith, Ellen Smith, Stephen Smith, Charles Sorenson, Richard Spratley, Jeam Steven, Barbara Stones, Gordon Swenson, Newell Taylor, David Thomas, Albert Ungricht, Suzanne Vol mar, Barbara Ward, Jody Williams, Ray Wong, Anna Wool ley, John Zierbarth. f'"rrr: r"- V f - .: i wye pi ... I ' It IS . - ' t . J To administer this treatment to Leonard McGee, Iloulhac Garn, the director of Food Services, or any of several other public figures, show Chronicle editor up at the U Days carnival Saturday. Here 1969-70 Angelyn Nelson gets the dunk. McGee, others face carnival dunk session Harboring any repressed aggressions against the residence Inter-Fraternit- Council-Panhelleni- y c, the LDSSA and Halls Student hall directors, the Food Service Residence director, Association, will range from a car smash and mush throwing to fortune telling, greased pole climbing, a kissing corral and a jail where for fifty cents you may have your friend arrested. Volleyball, foosball, bingo and finger painting has been included for you sports fans. VV.C. Fields movies will be shown and live musical entertainment will be on hand. ASUU President or McGee, maybe Chronicle Editor Roulhac Garn? Don't feel guilty. Who isn't? Carnival gives you the chance to do something about it. The Carnival, being Leonard U-Da- held Saturday from noon to 7 p.m. in the Marriott Library Plaza, will feature a dunking booth where chances to drop a number of campus "celebrities" into the drink will be auctioned off. From 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. the residence halls directors and the Food Service director will face the wrath of the crowd. From 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Office of Student Affairs representatives Harris Vincent, and Cheery Ridges, Garn, McGee and possibly Clark Campbell will meet a similar fate. Other activities featured at the carnival, sponsored jointly by FRIDAY NOOW DEVOTDOWAL 12:00 NOON Belle Spafford General President of the Relief Society 3-- Saturday evening, "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" will be shown at 7 p.m., and 9:30 p.m. in the North Chapel of the East Institute of Religion. Admission will be 75 cents. Proceeds from the Carnival will go to the Boys Ranch and help pay Greek Week expenses. U-Da- Residence halls slate big feast Picture some chefs parading across the lawn north of Ballif Hall, accompanied by a wild Polynesian drumbeat. If you can't, go up to the Residence Halls for their seventh annual Luau, Thursday at 5 p.m., and see it for yourself. The chefs will be laden with roast suckling pig, decorated hams and flaming swords of shishkebab. Live Polynesion entertainment will also be on hand for the event. Also in stock are 250 pounds of green shrimp, 30 pounds of cheddar cheese, 350 pounds of chicken breasts; eight cases of . INDIAN DAYS EVENTS WED. MAY 8. MISS INDIAN U of U Contest. -- UB, 7:30 THURS. MAY 9, Floyd Westerman "'Custer Died for Your Sins" Album Navajo Sundowners Best on the Navajo Nation Browning Pipestem Coffee & Politics 9 55, 255 OSH Topic: Indian and the Law SAT. MAY 11: Noo- n- Indian Food UB Indian Arts & Crafts UB Indian Foot Race Indian Pow Wow HPER. jt : y big-nam- to Phi Beta Kappa One hundred twenty-thre- e University students, have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa, the i II beginning of the school year. "We're trying to get a fairly e concert, a stomp, and a Presidential Ball," said Hamblin, adding, "I think it's really bad news when you don't play to what the students want." Hamblin plans to do an evaluation of the program by December for the benefit of future Openings projects. U whiz kids admitted Accept No Substitutes! 7 & 10 PM y . d The program plans by Openings rm TOMORROW AT THE EAST INSTITUTE cantaloupes, THE CHURCH Of IESUS CHRIST Of LATTtR-DAVvAINT- S 20 gallons of waldorf salad, 200 pounds of fried prawns and some other sea delicacies for the 1300 residence hall students to feast on. President David Gardner, his staff and deans of several colleges will be guests of the Luau. |