Show udent 66 Volume Students NOTICE assigned to general freshman English must come to Library 394 for sectioning Those who do not join a regular section and complete the work will Single Board ‘Muftracker’ Premiere Will Tomorrow PARRISH Editor Managing "The Nutcracker Ballet” BY MARDELL pre-mier- s SALT LAKE CITY AP — Hi0h-eeducation won the battle of the budget over the public schools in the last legislature Don’t be surprised to see a repeat this r in tomorrow at 8 pm Center Arts the Chase Fine a combined The ballet will be effort of the Utah Civic Ballet the Utah Symphony and Orches-tr- a year Why? Two reasons One and most obvious is that Nutcracker Ballet has been as very popular in Utah as well through the rest of the United The college enrollments are mcreas mg steadily The other been performed It has States is that higher education does a better job of lob than 120 times and It is estimated that more than half a million will attend Clara’s Christmas party in thousands Utah more In bying The last legislature boosted state aid to higher education by 41 percent The amount for pub-lischools went up 15 percent while the Itah Board of Educa-tiohad asked for 20 If the board has its way this time the public schools will be in line lor an increase of S23 million or about 25 percent Compare that with what the colleges and universities are ask55 percent boost from the ing current $34 G million in state aid excluding building funds There's no chance they’ll get that much but a lot of lawmak- across the nation locations of e sell out performance at LSU last year received a favor-abl- e review in STUDENT LIFE and indication of ticket sales on The n another sell out performance on Friday Tickets are now available at the Union Ticket Office Students with activity cards may obtain Tuesday indicated tickets Reserved tickets for Thursday evening are $2 and $3 and tickets for the 3 pm Thursday free matinee available stores are $1 and are at local schools Friday evening’s ers and USlJ rs Elementary must be at the there ers are looking favorably and accompanied by an Thursday Matinee adult today done of was repertoire of near major ballet company world The music of is perhaps more fa the Teh-aikovsk- Mar to many let itself actually people than the Nutcracker premiered before been or( bes-ePerformed m March and The d story occurs on Tle tree thpVG and y The 11371112 2Uests selm? ra and ?’ arnve at the home Fntz Herr Bros- - Rocks Spoelstra and Janice James join the Utah Civic Ballet Utah Symphony Orchestra in presenting the Nutcracker i!l be Thursday and Friday in the Ballet Performances Chase Fine Arts Concert Hall n1Sht W Clara XXs6S t0 l'“ 0 pwfJBl V 4s? breams that life- - t0’faHe fnd journey nut-an- d land ar‘d of the the stop the ? Sar Plum Fairy n neXt 13 farv summons refresh f°m Oncers for 4 VisUoS c°mes to anVnf Glara’s dram Fairy U land he retuS r? Sugar Plum Flara that she shin her magical whenever Tbe Getakes place in Neu many and PHclty sim- aM n °f the German istmas rernberg 5Ehout the ballGt°mmUniCated Peace Corps recruiting officers for the Western region will be on campus beginning for ten days to reciuit members for the Peace Corps Nathan Skinner and Hugh Jones two of three Peace Corps specialists m the West-erregion will talk to anyone interested in working with the Peace Corps Their booth will be located m the basement of the Union Building Skinner and Jones have both completed tours for the Peace Corps Skinner did work in irriga-tioin mechanization and land development Jones served in Iran and trained at Utah State The Peace Corps requires that members be at least 20 years old and prefer that they already have a degree unless they have a comparable job skill that can be put to use Two to-da- y agri-cultur- n In-d- ia H'innin!ahatCic Btah 15 P Ballet had its University of Chr'stensen fn° When Wllllam aSal of BalS fr?dedaDepart hrst Amerirahriutensei1 was state fiCan ch°reograph 1 the United COmplete work E°!’klng with the6c when he was ! t0 sit Coffipany Utah does not control Towler also looks it” to other measures including “el manat-in- n laiwua"e aptitude test will given m room 324 of the Union 2 pm Building at 10 am and dailv The Peace Corps recruit- ore emnhasized that the language test is only to gauge the students ohriitiee and is not graded on nnc fail tresis Applications for the atPeace the Corps can be obtained un- booth but can not be returned isnoinae test has been com d idn0uD A pleted A Peace Corps training movie slated for 7 pm Tues- s 3 onri Thursday in room 329 01 r dinner n Building indicated that next military the Peace Corps than anv other hires moJntPorP civijian agency emPloys approxi- 500 people who serve g in 58 under over 400 developed countries in !t n different lielas g those from attending college who should be going to tiade schools and those who are g ” He suggests that tuitions be increased and entrance requae-mentstiffened Lake Rep Jim Platt says a single board would result in the seven institutions ratner together “purchasing than purchasing separately The bookkeeping and supportive seiv-ice- s are the areas where we aie loosing money ’’ s lt Rep Ron Inkley and Sen E Whatever the increases for Lamar Buckner Ogden Republ both higher education and pub-lileans are among those unsold schools may turn out to be on a single board “I think it conclu-sioit’s almost a foregone that a tax I oust will be will cause as much trouble as necessary Probably the sales if you consolidated all of the 40 school boards of the state” tax jxissible others a says is legislator Happiness for Buckner doubts that it would not increasing taxes His next best move however is making save money “Hiring a super with certain the money raised by a ahigher education executive more could staff prove large tax boost is spent wisely expensive” he says Hence there is widespread sup port in the legislature for tightening the state’s control over higher education expenses The Legislative Council rec ominends “immediate establish-an- d mem ui education The board would re place the Coordinating Council and separate boards for each of the state’s colleges and univer-sitie- Letter Eases Parking issue Students who received over-nigparking tickets during the week of Nov 17 and Nov 24 will not have to appear in court at The schools are the University the times set for trial on Jan 15 according to a 9 and Jan of Utah Weber State College Utah State University College letter sent to the STUDENT of Southern Utah College of East- - LIFE Editor Karen Bush by Ted S Perry Logan City ern Utah Snow College and (letter appears on edi College The single board would be torial page in its entirety) According to the letter the charged with implementing a tickets would not have been dismaster plan for higher educa tion including standardization of missed under ordinary conditions admissions and tuitions and e- - except the officers were requir-bed to write so many tickets on lamination of curricula duplica the tions nights in question that they did not follow their usual prac- A counter proposal is that the Coordinating Council be given tice of making a notation in added authority The chief pro- - their book Even though the parking tickets ponent not surprisingly is the Coordinating Council - Clara then ll!S6eeywdW?7vls11 Snowflakes s Di-xi- e The tlle mouse king breaks lckedenchantment which a hand Some DrinpolmPriS0ned p1" the form of a cracw share the Many legislators feeling of Rep Ben E Fowler R Ogden who likes the idea of a single board but wrnnts assur-ancethat “the University of s Claa’s 6odfather who bnnss her a nut Sl fl hen!! 1S Christ trimmed Rep John P Redd tiful believes a single board “would save money through proper planning and curriculum corltrol” but he says a strength ened Coordinating Council “may be easier to sell ” Ink-le- y every in grams” n the part of Sen Warren E Pugh R Salt Lake says the board would competition between the universities for expanded pro- e and December 1892 one of the most widely ballet works It is a Is n 26 percent reserved seats which co- - performance "The Nutcracker” first staged in upon the recommendation of the ordinating Council of Higher $135 million or per-forman- activity card holdeschool students will be no lor this y also is reserved for Cache Concert season ticket hold Civic ter education” LEE BYRD BY Associated Press Writer e An Associated Press poll shows that the legislators are about evenly divided on the issue of a single board but that near- ly all favor some tightening of control And Senate President Haven J R Layton and House Barlow designate Lorin N Speaker Lake have prom- Pace no tax increases will ised that be considered until their col leagues have done their best to insure maximum economy Rep Della L Loveridge D- - Sajt Lake says a single board would “stop duplication equal- resources and develop bet prevent future parking tickets ac-tcording to Skip Shelton ASUSU studentbody president n the entire substance of Attorney Perry's letter (m that pleading not guilty has broader lmplica-tion than moving the car within an hour's period) I do feel that the mayor and the city attorney have been most fair in having those tickets dismissed I ly appreciate this type of ap preciation on the partof the city” said Shelton great-matei- y |