Show Volume 66 Utah State University — Monday October 14 1968 Number 8 Union Position Announced Due to conflict with schedul ed at the UB information desk ing and other commitments Su- - until Friday Interviews for the san Manning has resigned her position will be held on the as social chairman on lowing Tuesday Social chairman the Union program council is one of the prime position on the Union program council Ken Anderson administrative Applications will be open also announced that until for committee Friday this position is now open and members of all union commit that applications will be receiv- - tees fol-positi- vice-preside- Pearl S Buck noted author and lecturer will speak at USU The assembly will Wednesday am in the Chase Fine Arts Concert Hall Pearl Buck is best known for her novels on life in China She won the Pulitzer Prize for her book The Good Earth in 1931 and in 1938 she became the third American writer and the first American woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature In her autobiography Pearl Buck writes that she was raised begin at 10:30 in two world of her missionary parents worlds-t- Americaii he and the world vast and cap Mrs Buck was of a forced to leave during the revo- lution in 1927 tivating China the daughter of a missionary Today Pearl Buck is the author to China and she grew up in a of over 60 books and 200 arti-cle- s Chinese civilization s and purely and is speaking their language studying one of the most widely trans with a Confusian tutor and lated American authors with every sort of Chi Besides her writing and travel nese from peasant to aristocrat ing Mrs Buck is also occupied She came to the United States with humanitarian acmany to complete her education and tivities She is the founder of graduated from Randolf-Macon’- s t the Association for Women’s College She received Understanding Between Coun-trie- s her master’s degree from Cor and the founder of Welnell University She later return come House an agency which ed to China and lived there l places unwanted children of she and her husband were mixed races short-storie- Vw un-ti- French Slight Mixon Humphrey in Mews Editors Note article Nouvel weekly The choose Scylla (The following was translated from “Le Observateur” a French by Nicole Dufrensne) Americans will have to between Charybdis and between plague and Cho-ler- a dreadful choice Yet both Nixon and Humphrey are the reflections of middle class America in 1968 They do Hold Meeting The weekly World Association luncheons will be continued this year beginning Tuesday noon Everyone is welcome to attend the discussion and luncheon meeting in UB 212 Persons attending may either bring a lunch or purchase it from the UB cafeteria E East-Wes- Due to double booking of the Four Freshmen on October 26 the contract for their Homecoming appearance has been This contract will also cancel the appearance of George Stevens the comedian who was can-cele- Association To n not represent the habitual carica-tur- e of the US used in orien-ta- l propagandas They are not very wealthy Both of them Nixon in particular started from nothing If our traditional French image were true to reality the winner should have been Rocke-felle- r the rich giant who spent a fortune for his campaign If our desires were realities it’s McCarthy who should Eugene have triumphed over Humphrey But in this peculiar democracy of production and consumption even money cannot overcome powerful radical currents Whether they are Republicans or Democrats most Americans are afraid of everything: the Ne- groes the financial crisis the students Latin America even their fears own civilization These which lead to a kind of militant mediocrity will not rein force necessarily imperialistic virtualities Nixon speaks of dealing with Moscow Paris Hanoi and even Peking: Why not? Nobody realized that there was in the famous philosophy of the “free world” an interventionist logic more in a warlike man-ne- r than the economy With less ideology “a la Truman” and more economic intrusion “a la Humphrey” the big lobbies in Washington might be able at last to impose their views: peace is more profitable than the role of world police It is precisely this peace in coexistence and anesthesia that frightens all the revolutionaries in the world Peace today is no longer a value d scheduled to appear in conjuc-tio- n with the Four Freshmen announced Randy Moore chairman Newly scheduled forhomecom-in- g r are the Irish Rovers e who stars singing popular with their song home-comin- pop-ula- be-cam- “The Unicorn” USU Frosh s Appearing with the Irish will be John Stewart an original member of the King ston Trio with his new singing companion Bucky Ford The duo have been very popular in past weeks in the San Francisco area and are especially noted for their recent appearances at the Hungry Ro-ver- Enthusiastic The Aggie class of ’72 is beginning its third week on campus For returning USU students things are falling into that old routine again but freshment are experiencing a new educational and social life A group of upperclassmen that once long ago they too bore the title freshmen picks ed out some of the chief of the class First some freshmen stUl persist in wearing their high school sweaters they are prompt with their assignments and would rath-e- r run to class than walk in late However they all agree that the freshmen have what USU needs: enthusiasm Freshmen interviewed were happy to be here though some admit a little homesickness at times Generally they like on their own to show individuality and responsibility They dislike upper classmen who bug Some freshmen dislike them walking so far between classes like from the Annex to the fourth floor of the library for-gettin- g “I” Prices for the homecoming appearance will be $2 per ticket for the concert and $150 per tick et for the dance or combina tion tickets to both events wiU be $5 per couple charac-teristic- Sec-ondl- y be-in- g Plans Aired For Better Monographs Publication The Scholarly Committee has had to limit its action the past year to sharing the printing cost for the faculty Honor Lectures and the publica-tioof two monographs due to a restricted budget imposed as part of the university’s overall budget curtailment according to Dr TY Booth chairman The committee has submitted e recommendations for plans to stimulate the individual staff publications It also believes that USU needs to build publica tions in the humanities and social sciences to an even balance with the achievement in the scientific and technical areas One specific recommendation is to establish a Western Ameri-ca- n Test Society which would publish significant western literary historic and folklore doc uments with editorial aids to Austin E Fife who proposed the project and others who have studied it this would be a limitless opprotunity for a new and important service The committee noted that the university did not have the budget to support the proposal made by Dr S George Ellsworth tor the History Department It was sug gested that the university apply to have the journal of the West d ern History Association on campus This is the kind of opportunity the university should be seeking in the opinion of the committee The two monographs published are ‘Modern Hopi Pottery’ by Kathryn Sikorski Anthropology and ‘Shakespeare’s Emergent n long-rang- Cadets Wanted For Drill Team For the first time since 1962 will have an Army ROTC Drill Team according to Colonel MR McCarthy professor of Military Science Membership for the drill team will be open to all MS I II and III cadets Application forms will be passed out during Mill-tarScience classes this week Interested cadets are encouraged to apply Applicants are to meet in the south end of the Military Science building immediately af ter the Brigade formation at 11:30 Thursday Oct 17 Candidates will drill as a unit throughout this quarter At the end of the quarter eighteen USU y pri-mar- and Patty Baugh a special education major is sitting in Eero Saarinens’ famous womb chair one of the Interested persons special designs considered in the CT 75 home furnishings course ibay still register for the class until Oct 17 at 7pm at which time the class will meet again g three alternate mem-ber- y s will be se'ected in tryout for permanent membership The outstanding member of the drill team will be the drillmaster One hour of University Cre dit will be given for partici-patio- n on the drill team Activities will include parades ceremonies and drill competition Ac-cordi- esta-blishe- Form A Study of the Structures of the Henry VI Play’ by Don M Ricks English |