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Show ! I 4 ; i t I Campus to Be Gaily Decorated For Homecoming WeekOctoberl 3 8-2- - j 7 ; The Brigham Young University parade. Life Council are making prepara for the reception. Refreshwear colorful will dec to the A campus pub tions special Invitation ments will be served, and a comorations in honor of Homecoming lic, studentbody; and faculty, to mittee 'ready to escort visitors Week Oct IS through 23. visit the various units following on a tour of the campus and Plans for decorating the vari the parade is extended by the housing units.. ous housing units are progress Homecoming Committee. Tro Most campus social units are ing full speed ahead in competi- phies for winning decorations tion for trophys that will be pre will be awarded at e of planning to hold receptions for sented to the best decorated cam the football game. Judges antick 'their alumni following the foot- pus housing unit. This will mark pate a dificult task in . selecting ball game. Places of these the first year that the units have as elaborate prepara- - tions will be announced later in been decorated, and enthusiasm tions are being made. the week. , is running high for the project. An alumni reception will be, . Students hope to make it an an held on the patio in: the center To keep cauliflower white, nual event that will share in of Heritage Halls under the spon- - soak it in cold salt water for popularity with the Homecoming sorship of the Homecoming Com-fca- lf an hour before cooking. . PROVO, UTAH c UTAH, THURSDAY, COUNTY, A j OCTOBER 14, 1954 Woman Faculty Member Named To NEA Group Evening With Romberg Delights 'Musical Peasants9 Says Writer . half-tim- recep-winne- Lillian Christensen of the Brig-haYoung University ElementEducation faculty has been ary committee a member appointed As Educational on National the t We us. don to sound mighty nice By THERON H. LUKE for sociation program planning from octave one anoiner, Us musical peasants had the know was an it the Centennial Year, sounded good. time of our fives in the George but they nounced today. of the Albert Smith Fieldhouse earlier Some of the reactions She will leave for Washington, interesting this week. (Don't start correcting audience were more some D. C, Wednesday, Nov. 24, and s men-berthe English, professor it's "we" than the music, like work on this committee Thurs of the faculty applauding, musical but "us" and Saturday, the a bit furtively, after day. Friday weekend. even though musical peasants.) chorus and principals had Thanksgiving Mrs. Christensen was a dele The occasion was the first con- the out the Drinking Song to the National Convention cert of the lyceum series an roared gate Student Prince. (Guess of NEA in Cleveland, the from O. She has of evening with the music even the professors realized that been active in the Utah Educa who the guy Romberg wasn t written about a tional Association, participating probably never made the Met song Another place in work steinful but left his music in the hearts that had ofuscocoa.) schools, shops, leadership worried for a minute and on the state committee for of millions all over with the singand Education Teacher Profes His lovable, singable, lilting tunes was the Riff song an imagin sional Relations. She has from several operettas (Student ers sauatted around rep a minute For ary campfire. Prince, Desert Song, My Mary- there, before we realized what resented various local education land, New Moon and others) kept was happening, we thought they al associations.' She was a dele the state policy making 4400 people thoroughly entertain were going to start shooting craps gate in House of Delegates; she d for an evening. the body, on the fieldhouse floor right NEA sponsored Nathe attended A cast of four soloists VirOur good friend Herald R tional Classroom Teachers Con ginia MacWatters, Nancy Ken- Clark, who has brought the ference in Las the Vegas; study Glefln Darwin and William musical greats of the world to yon, Olvis and a chorus of 12 made it Provo for more years than we conference of the Association for Childhood Education in Minne can remember, had a few mis apolis; and served as a section givings about an entire evening leader in Elementary School of music, for the peasantry (the Science. ' term is ours, not his.) "We'll be criticized," he said, METER "but everyone will enjoy this." CANDIDATE GETS TICKET 3 "Who will criticize you?" we ST. BONIFACE, Man. (UP) i asked." "A few longhairs who Louis for mayor can't stand to hear anything the on an Leger, running meter platform, hoi polloi can enjoy?" received a traffic ticket Wednes Wonderful Music More than $1000 has been colfor overtime parking. We left it at. that until after day lected during the first twadays of the week-lon- g Campus Chest the performance, when Herald and happy as Fund Drive on Brighamr Young R. stood beaming out. "It was crow filed the huge University campus. wonderful music," he said, and The drive started Monday, and meant it. Herald R., in our will continue throughout the, week. opinion is not in even the slight g campaProceeds of the a cultural snob. He est ign-will go to organized chari- lovesdegree in music that anything ties. This is the only such drive gives to people, and he pleasure held on campus during the school sincerely enjoyed Romberg. But year. he was still a little apprehensive, ' The fund is expected to grow that the fare of the through the Wednesday afternoon intimating a trifle frothy and was evening "Mat" dance all proceeds will somewhat in intestinal lacking go into the drive fund. Additional fortitude, musically speaking. revenue will be realized from ad Well, Herald R., it takes all missions to the Campus Chest kinds of people to make a world. Dance Friday, Oct. 15. The dance Ourselves, we like a lot of the will be held in two sections of the classics. There was a George Albert Smith Fieldhouse guy named Tchaikowsky (who atand the Social Hall. A large a Russian in an age before tendance is expected at this was the Communists invented music) & ..Y crowning event of the drive. who wrote some of the most won derful music the world will ever know. There was a somewhat m - Zry longhairs Sig-mu- the-worl- I .it : - nd mmrrm" i i d. Campus Chest Fund Drive Tops $1000 ANTI-PARKIN- G anti-parki- ng RECEIVES TRAINING Aviation cadet Robert K. Corbett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Corbett, 243 S. 2nd E., Provo is receiving jet pilot training at Williams Air Force Base, Chandler, Ariz. During his training at'this Nation's first jet fighter school, f he wffl fly the North American 8 jet trainer. As a only dual-setrainer, and the Lockheed member of America's most select group the jet student pilots-- he will receive 80 hours of flight training in jet aircraft, in adand approximately 200 hours of dition to 50 hours in the 8 highly technical academic studies, plus. 145 hours of military training. Upon successful completion of five months of intensive flying, academic training, this pilot trainee will earn his wings and second lieutenant's commission in the U. Is. Air Force. (U. S. Air Force photo). T-3- 3, A SALE AS GREAT AS ITS NAME! many features usually found only conventional-typ- e dual-sea- t, T-2- 1:) Men's Gold Dond dliress slhioes T-2- J ' XJ. vjil Ay l I AV B H ("ftjw ' 1 1 I I Pacifate protected vamp lining inhibits foot germs I Vy in fund-raisin- New, popular Fall styles Smooth leather uppers . Goodyear welt construction Long wearing rubber soles Comfortable leather Insoles I 1 All 9ffX?I.V .'."ftf.V. 'f'fito at higher prices! at -- njj T J w Js . ' - ' A 3 so-call- ed Kraut named Story of Oil thoven wrote music that will live forever and a more that Shown to have given us, and continue 'to give, some greatest mo we ments ever ll know. Exchange Club bergBut andpersonally, we like Rom have bad-temper- Bee- ed who & h-- ; J :,4 - tf-- few, ox xne we thought The story of the first man who Bach stinks. There,always we've said it figured out how to drill for oil, ana we re glad. , and persisted over years of hard ships and disappointment until he succeeded, was shown to members of the Provo Exchange Club this week. . Bob Barbee, Exchange Club ODDDDDDDCiiD Mitk was the first Agotn this year choice of more Utqh families according to the Salt Lake City Newspapers Consumer Analysis. And there is a good reason, too. milk is produced in the high mountain valleys of Utah where the choicest Hi-la- nd Readers Named For salesman Literary Festival member and branch for the Standard Oil Company, a film in connection with Oil Progress Week which portrayed the story of "Col. Edwin L. Drake the man who figured out how to drill for oil in the years .showed prior 10 me civu war. Mr. Barbee sketched a few facts for his audience on the oil industry: It is one of the most competitive industries in America today. There are now over 200,000 service stations in America, yet service stations "account for only half of the outlet consumption in the oil Industry (the balance goes direct to industry and for a myriad of uses.) The oil Industry has grown from free enterprise a man who had faith in the idea for drilling and reaching the raw product, a lone service station operator who saw a chance to make some money by liard work and capital risk, until today It is a giant in the American industrial and economic scene. Arta Ballif and Jack Whitaker. both of Provo, will be among the readers at the annual Brigham Young University literary festival Sunday, Oct. 17, at 8:15 p.m. in &mitn Banquet Hall. A number of selections' from the work of local writers will be included in the program. Regional literature also will be featured This will include the following selections ana authors: "Come Come, Ye Saints;" "Envoi" by Ezra Pound; "St. George and the by Charles Walker; "The Streets of Loredo" by John A. and Alan Lomax; "Credo" by Robinson Jeffers; "Night" by Ed ward Hart; "The Valley, 1847,' by Clinton Larson; "My Mother's Drag-on- " Hand by Ann Woodbury ' ' '"' WM 1 Hi-La- nd dairy lands in the state are found. From a select group of these dairymen Dairy draws their supply. When you want Mttk the best . . . mst$t on Utah's first choke. Hi-La- nd I Ki-ia- nd v ; : ; "UUU 10 I BZI 1 I tail 1 : .. Hafen; "Dusk in a Utah Town" by Chris tie Lund Coles; "The Hill Men" by Zona Hansen; "Rock Canyon" by Jean Budge; and "Utah Lake" by Cherry McKay. f k rs, MimmimiiniiM NW ?D J lMmA fX h km I V Havofop I Tl CionooTVccrA ; 33 49 03 our finest children's 1 5040 mixhir proltch lo 51 blow. Advaliy superior to any Mlhanol en Km market. Rish rwit, cemslon. 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