Show ° Utah State University Monday January 8 1968 65 Volume Writer Staff Lite the Manchu’s” served Degn Louise hy Middleton turned In 11 nd asked “Tell me Dre 1 his do feeling In the to withdraw Amer the problems of the neo-isol- a typ® of a find j I dents growing today 3" from krld do” I said “but Ita’tW If I get that from L newspapers rather than from them s’ opinions i Is Isolated In Jack Peterson "and the people sponded there have always been Kieihat Isolated and this re as la their thinking” university mountains” Our d a well known Middleton Drew correspondent who one :is for America’s number York Times jttspaper the New on USU last Wednesday iPe at But with Waulle and France of is tijerlence In the bureaus tie major European capitals talked freely and knowledge-- j ® many subjects jack and I rode with him from (Lake City airport to Logan afternoon and then — sd other Student Life person over a friendly dinner with respected that night Conversation (ofay always i bought develop iit d do” can we all conversation our then ind com-nte- “We time there so they on their own That’s on i world affairs turns to Vietnam on time M lddleton our war there some China He many Chinese he ws and has met who are aeas d other Aslan countries eIalned that even though were Chinese only by na nallty and not by citizenship 7 were proud of the strength development China seemed to In the last de-l- e experiencing Then when Mao’s Cultural volution turned the country Into u civil war the Chinese were appointed to see “the old China Communist :ed to the of 1 ’actional return” “I guess ism has not had peace since ers International sena his position last Shetty resigned a rsday in f'lpatloB to T ' Green formal letter of ASUSU President h&ty said the combination use spent on his course work frch and studying for his 1 J comprehenslves which will tUs garter made It impos 1® !or to do a proper Job °r ICC hlch ls lle‘d by the I S’" r senator k !rer? senate and ICC hi! CoortJlnatlng Coun r!“& tils action were a thfd unhappy and felt he fotog a good job Middleton also stated that com munlsm Is “a dying Ideology In Asia” Communism built Its strength fighting the colonial pow ers there and now they are gone and It ts left with little to cement It Its new cry of opascertedneo-colonlato l position Ism by Western Industrial powers Is hollow to the Asians who “are a very smart people They know they must have Investment to develop” MOST RECENTLY the corre spondent lias been stationed at the United Nations Asked about Arthur Goldberg’s resignation as the US’s ambassador there Mid dleton said that he believes Gold berg has regreted giving up the Supreme Court to become the UN ambassador but that “he Is a sincere man and I’m sure he genulnly thought he could do something about Vietnam at the r Preent r as between ttie United States and the Soviet Union” Middleton Is a widly versed man who Is amiable and relaxed In his conversation He chated about bis home In the Adtron dark mountains In New York and the bird hunting he does there He asked about the Utah moun tains and the origin of Logan’s name Assigned to the Soviet Union bureau be learned the Russian language and he spoke about the language itself “It’s a very prim atlve language All the words for everything on our dinner table are borrowed from French German or English" except for the word for ‘glass’ The word for ‘enemy’ and ‘German’ are the same word which means literally ‘from the west’ Indicating the long history of those two people” ls haunt‘ spectre of stu h7lrst tlme ln the ’Silvia lnlted States have become a lMerest for all the ofthoUr?f of concem for nat on’ and a source tor to Vome of ‘he nation unlIue to 1960’s” (Clark n Sa U IJJ "Ji hav from8 ‘ (lca passed since the begin sdent reVOlt at a" ?rmany iead- Most - ad- - cam sporadic dls Splr“ Of Stu lclvllmP!i!he llve-- r !o tatoUth0ntS fimC thth everywhere wn- - as no tor ft J!8’ °f anyone trators Bnd IfSt KVtive aUCrat3 ‘hclud 0me what Kerr 1 C 10 Previn! V tomjKi Sn8!udent genera become “a 1 Pecifl 'toudent hls‘°ry” inner on campus At large Po'r'' ni!d to read "hu lo Hrentl!h concern a de U 18 own lu lT day r iy Although an official statement of the Faculty Senate’s reasons for delaying the plan was not Profes Immediately available sor Ray Sanders chairman of the faculty committee which stu died the proposed measure In dlcated that lack of time to plan and Implement the program was one of the main considerations Prof Sanders noted that if a plan was- to be effected this spring pre registration would have to begin halfway through winter quarter “The faculty was very much interested” he said “but they felt that pre registration ought to have every chance of sue cess They felt a shotgun effort stood every chance of failure” He said that Faculty Senate members Indicated a concern that the procedure proposed might be complicated and that the time was not adequate to orient facul ty and students to the plan Dr MR Merrill academic vice president said a full and official statement regarding the faculty sentate’s action would be released Wednesday He declined - The Scene What To Do Where To Go At USU Monday Jan 8 IRC Senate Chambers 4:30 to 6 pm Independent Council Senate Chambers 6 to 8 pm Book Exchange UB Cloakroom 8 am to 5 pm of class down the number changes and a pre Inventory of Meanwhile Steve Green classes allowing departments to ASUSU President said a full re open new sections when the de port of student and faculty ac mand for a class Justified It tlon on the measure would be The University of Utah adopt presented to the ASUSU Senate ed computer at its regular meeting Wednesday some time ago There a student evening simply fills out a proposed sched Gordon Allen Senate repre ule and malls it to the admissentatlve on the ASUSU sions office The student’s com pre registration committee felt that pleted schedule is sent to him by could have been return mail A regular registrastarted spring tion day ls held to accommodate successfully students but quarter but said that he was new and part-timnevertheless “quite pleased with the turn out ls small because shown by faculty sen the majority of students register the Interest ’ in advance ate” In the main this method of “Dean Neuberger (dean of ad missions and records) knows that registration is supported by stu Utah State is headed towards comdents and faculty at the U How ever some students have voiced plete and full computer pre-reistration” Allen said “I think objections to the schedule of that implementing a program on class hours given them by the student com a small scale say with only the computer One juniors and seniors spring quar- plained that although he received ter would have brought an air all of his classes of experiment and that between they were scheduled at 7:30am 2:30 pm and 5:30 pm “Student Life” and our commit tee we could have excited and Allen said that class changes Informed the students ln time” might become an even greater Allen said the present admin problem under computer pre-reIstration plans would call for Istration during the present frolics” system earlier fleldhouse registration “fieldhouse some modification with This This would be because students plan while not as complete as who receive alternates often de cide later to completely change full computerized class schedule Such tlon would enable a pre Inventory their in the bookstore a program of changes are difficult to program preadvlsement aimed at cutting Into the computer e first-choic- g a lufcrcdter Ballet At USU Tuesday Jan 9 Book Exchange UB Cloakroom 8 am to 5 pm Foreign Film Association 6 to 10 pm Sophomore Council Senate Chambers 3:30 ?o 4:30 pm LDSSA Fires’de Alvin R Dyer Fine Arts Concert Hall Matinee At 3 Scheduled by Carma Wadley 7:30 pm The Utah Civic Ballet and the Utah Symphony Orchestra will of present two performances “The Nutcracker” Jan 12 ln the Fine Arts Center Concert Hall The matinee performance is scheduled for 3 pm and the evening ballet will begin at 8 Wednesday Jan 10 AWS Senate Chambers :30 pm Film Lecture Curtis Nagel "Portraits of Austria" Old Main Auditorium 8 pm Activity Card or tickets for $1 ASUSU Senate Senate Chambers 5:30 pm Independent Council Surf Dance Union Ballroom 1 1 pm Tickets for the evening per formance are all reserved seats and must be picked up by Wed nesday Jan 10 at 5 pm at the UB Ticket Office One student body or faculty card must be presented for each ticket desired Reserved seats for the evening ballet which are still available after this dead line will be sold to the general public beginning Thursday Jan 11 at the Ticket Office and also at the Fine Arts Center Just prior to the performance There will be no reserved seats for the matinee and students and faculty will be admitted by presenting their activity card at the door 8 pm Thursday Jan 1 1 Freshman Council Senate Chambers 6:30 pm Union Movie “The Night of the Grizzly" Union Steve Green ASUSU President thought It was unfortunate Shet-tresigned He said Shetty had done his best and could under stand his resignation y Auditorium 7 pm Friday Jan 12 Utah Ballet "Nutcracker" Fine Arts Auditorium Performances at 3 and 8 pm Union Movie "The Night of the Grizzly" 7 pm surprized” Leslie Peterson tor of ICC was “very unhappy” She said she could see his prob lems and had always thought “he could do the best Job” Saturday Jan 1 3 Basketball Seattle vs LDSSA Dinner Dance She said she did not know whether or not it would be easy to find a replacement for Shetty and that did not the foreign students seem to be willing to support a senator USU at Logan 8 pm Union Movie 7 pm For placing events in the Calendar you Must call Wally Odd 752-195- 1 Light Campus Fires fiiaASectre ft n1? to comment on the matter be fore that time Plans for spring quarter pre registration were postponed un til winter quarter of 1968 by a Faculty Senate decision recent No machinery can do any good wtien you have such divergence Sluder :i'eKeyeir® By Suzanne Dean Life Staff Writer UN” Jack then asked that If a man as sincere as Goldberg has ap become disolusioned parently UN’s capabilities with the Is not within the UN itself but with the divergent policies of the countlres who axe members Sam Abolarin of ICC was “Very Number 33 ob Comment Co-Work- ‘s Middleton Pres Resigns ICC jiie menalngfui way as fiee as possible from ority and mechanization autli The mood underlying the student movement ls difficult to dls sect But one of Its Ingredients must certainly be the alienation that comes from the bigness and of the university complexity which makes the student unable to affect his environment Instead the student finds his the university the environment controlling Service Selective him telling him where he should live what hours lie should keep whom he can or cannot hear speak on campus whether he should go to war Lee McEvoy staff member of UCLA’s Student Counseling Ser described the student's vice frustration ln an essay In the UCLA Daily Bruin: “One finds that the telephone regls official’ transcripts tratlon cards and other artifacts command far more respect and Immediate response than do hu of man beings The tyranny clocks schedules forms IBM procedures registration cards and calendars has become so pervasive and powerful as to no longer be within reproach" Like the hippies student ac tlvlsts have a feeling of power lessness Unlike the hippies the activists are working within the system to try to force change upon It rather than abandoning the system as hopeless The power the students have claimed for themselves ls ex in varying degrees of in from mild demands for tensity seats on a committee to strikes virtually shutting down an entire Institution The term “student power” or lglnated at the National Student Assn Congress at College Park Md ln August As conceived It was not meant to convey a de sire for power or control over every aspect of campus life It does however have stark connotations leading one Univer sity of Minnesota faculty member Frank to call It a misnomer Verbrugge acting dean of the In stltute of Technology said the term “gives the Impression that students are pitted against faculty and administrators” Student power like black power said Stanley J Wenberg a Un lverslty of Minnesota vice presi something In dent “connotes What ls needed derisive herently most of all is to reconcile the Interests of the public the leg lslature the regents the staff and the students” The NSA Congress named three areas of student rights: (1) “Their citizens” as full rights right to democra (2) “Their nonacademic tlcally control their to lives" and (3) their right ln the fullest the to (participate and educational administrative erted decision-makin- process Thus the areas of participation care and the areas of control are t 'fully differentiated “The basic Issue student power revolves around” The Minnesota Dally reports “ls Inwhlchareas students should have ‘sole’ con trol “The NSA resolution lists seven such areas registration of student govern organizations ment financing regulation of cul tural programming determina tlon of hours policies establish ment of social regulations estab Ushment of housing regulations and all disciplinary dicislons re garding the violation of student regulations “Administrators say there are few areas If any of sole stu dent concern” the Daily contln ued AFROTC Training Posts Remain Open Until Jan “If the University ls really relevant to faculty admlnlstra tors and students alike then Air Force ROTC training ls there are no areas of sole ln due terest of one group” said Paul stillanopen to new ofapplicants the deadline extension to Cashman assistant vice presi for taking the AFROTC qualify dent for educational relationships and development ‘All the other groups have an Interest also’ ” Thus the battleground ls read led with variations from cam pus to campus On one campus students claim the right to live off campus ln the face of a reg ulatlon requiring dormitory rest dence (Texas Technological Col lege) and on another campus the right to protect a scenic hill from the desecration of a tern porary building (City College of New York) lng examination AppUcatns for the 1968 will now have until Jan 12 to take the test Interested persons should contact Capt R H Burgoyne Assistant Profes sor of Aerospace Studies or Sgt Moran In room 107 of the Mill tary Science Building The chances for acceptance Into AFROTC are greater than ever before according to Capt Burgoyne He said that the higher ac pro-gra- r wap? V p'1 1 2 ceptance rate ls a relectlon of an Increasing need for pilots changes ln the scoring procedure on the qualifying test and the fact that candidates are now selected on a local rather than national basis Students applying for the pro gram must pass the Air Force Officer Qualfylng Testandamed leal examination be selected by and sue an Interview board cessfully complete a ilxweek field training course during this con tng summer They must also plan two additional years of un dergraduate or graduate college work which “THE NUTCRACKER” was first staged ln December 1892 ls today one of the most widely done of ballet works It Is a part of the repertoire of nearly every major ballet company ln the world The music of Tchaikovsky ls perhaps more familiar to many people than the ballet itself The Nutcrack er Suite actually premiered be fore the ballet having been or chestrated and performed ln March 1892 The story occurs on Christ mas eve The tree ls trimmed and the guests arrive at the home of Clara and Fritz Herr Drosselmeyer Clara’s godfath er who makes toys brings her a nutcracker fashioned ln the form of a little man The night Clara dreams that her toy comes to life The nutcracker battles the mouse king and breaks a wicked enchant ment which had Imprisoned a handsome prince ln the form of a nutcracker He and Clara then journey to fairyland They visit the Snow Queen and the dancing snowflakes The next stop ls the Land of Sugar Plum Fairy and the fairy summons refresh ments ln the form of dancers for the visitors ID Cards Hero Students who have applied for plastic ID cards at the library may now pick them up Burdett A Peterson Puollc Services librarian reports they are beinj issued in the reserve room |