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Show THE THUNDERBIRD f-- b 7 V. W. iD? BY f ' Ae rvVTfAVW JL 11 V SUSC THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1989 PAGE 3 TJCT, J& P v AMANDA REESE SUSC students enjoyed a wide variety of entertainment Tuesday evening at the annual talent Jubilee. Performers included members of the schools students and faculty. Peter Tagg, a communication major and member of the forensics team, was emcee for the evening. Along with announcing the evenings acts, he entertained the audience between the numbers. Tagg told the results of bogus polls, demonstrated his amazing mastery of the exercise bicycle, shared native Rugby cheers, performed an amazing knife throwing act and demonstrated how beautiful he (alias Bertha Crotchrot) looks in an evening gown. David Lee, language and literature department head, opened the evening with a reading. He showed the audience the lighter side of raising pigs with his reading of Tuesday Morning Unloading Pigs, and Cops in Richfield, a poem about a mans revenge on the law when forced to miss his pig auction. Roger Bean, public relations director for SUSCs theatre department and for the Utah Shakespearean Festival, shared a bit of Farley family humor with the packed Jubilee audience. Beans first impression was of a young boy, Eddie Farlev Preston, III. With much decorum, as is always the case with the Farleys, Eddie presented a poem entitled What My Family Means to Me. Eddie wrote the poem himself, and with only a little prodding from his mother, recited the piece without a flaw. The Three Types of Sugar proved to be the Jubilee favorite, Tuesday. From left, Powdered Sugar, Gary Ziegler; Brown Sugar, Lawrence Gilbert ; Sugar Cane, Reuben Togisala, Everett Kelepolo, and Oscar Fakahua serenaded the packed audience with renditions of Chain Gang and Stand By Me. Bean also performed as a Farley housewife, who gave her own rendition of the ever popular classic Climb A song entitled The Way She Makes Me Feel was then performed by Gordon Burch. Burch, a transfer Every Mountain. student from the University of Utah and Dixie College Megan Marshall, accompanied by Jared Lees, is now involved in the music performed the song Never Without You. department and as a Michelle Dutson performed a humorous monologue cheerleader. entitled The Stepsister Speaks Out. Her monologue Communication major Julie Cook followed. She described the difficulty of living with the famous demonstrated her skills on the piano with a Hungarian Cinderella. number. Next, Jennifer Rowland with the members of the Patty does Evita followed, featuring Patty Esplin I of Kinds Fall in Three When Sugar performed abilities in this comic group demonstrating her quick-chang- e Love With You, originally recorded by Nat King Cole. musical piece. Shannon Otte and Alaris Hirschi performed a dance number entitled Rosebud, choreographed by Burch Mann, founder of the American Folk Ballet. The final act of the evening was by an upcoming group of SUSC, Three Types of Sugar. Members of the group include Lawrence Gilbert as Brown Sugar; Oscar Fakahua, Everett Kelepolo, and Reuben Togisala as Sugar Cane; and Gary Ziegler as Powdered Sugar. The group performed several songs including Chain Gang and Stand By Me. ASSUSC Senate opens term with budget' hearings Discussions include funding requests by ROTC, Literary Guild, Resident Housing Association and Masque Club extra aid to assist the program here and bring everyone BY JODI REINARD together. Literary Guild representative Jenny Lamoreaux The ASSUSC Senate met for the first time this year requested $2,500 in hopes of increasing the number of published authors readings on campus. We are hoping on Monday, Oct. 2, and budget hearings, the passage to have five this year. Previously, weve had only three. of new by-laand establishment of a nontraditional Other universities have about 10 a year, she said. funding committee focused the meeting. Concerns of According to Lamoureaux, in addition to authors street safety, especially on 200 South, dominated discussion. presenting their works, they also visit various classes. They talk to classes and instruct them, she said. Mike Terry, a junior accounting major, urged all Kaylene Schurtz petitioned the senate to allot $1,130 senators to join together as a body and draft a letter to for 20 students to attend the Intermountain Affiliation be submitted to the Utah Department of of Colleges and Universities Resident Halls Association Transportation along with a community-circulate- d in Butte, Montana. petition to improve the safety of streets surrounding the convention to be held in NovemberSUSCs RITA While attending this workshop, college. Its not a safe street. We need a safer students about issues and education, and programming situation, said Terry. ideas and awareness, said Chuck Mollenkopf, director The senate reached a consensus agreeing to draft a d seminar and resident living. It is a of letter to add to the petition. workshop, he said. Clubs and organizations packed the room to solicit Schurtz concurred, and said It teaches us what to do funds from the senates shrinking budget, which now in various situations like date rape. She added, It will stands at $14,999. also help us retain students (who are living in the Cadet Sgt. Jason Woodford asked the senate for this year). dorms $1,975 to assist the ROTC on campus. He explained Representing SUSCs Masque Club, Dorcas Adams that ROTC sponsors many activities on campus like the sum of $3,500 to help with funding for wanted Patriots Week, and provides the color guards for the athletic activities. production costs. In addition to productions, the club He added that the ROTC not only sponsors activities also plans to offer a free Thanksgiving dinner to the elderly and needy and sponsor an easter egg hunt in but also helps develop persons character. It helps the spring for the communitys children. he said. Our them learn leadership and In addition to sponsoring these activities, the club is standards of performance are very high. We need the high-powere- self-wort- h, a Festivention for area hoping to host and schools and communities who are participating in any type of a drama program. We have to make sure what we do looks good thats why were asking for your money, said Adams. She emphasized that the Festivention will bring people on campus, and cause them to look more closely at what SUSC has to offer. which In other business, senators passed new clubs and organizations must obey in order to appear before the senate to ask for additional funding. The laws include the following: Each club must decide whether the activity will serve SU academically, or whether it is primarily for activity purposes; whether or off, the funding would serve the students and how many students it would affect. The senate will continue to require clubs to match all senatorial funding. A ceiling cost will be applied to protect money from being spent for items other than those specified. Senate funding should be used for fixed costs such as transportation, entry fees or guest speakers. There needs to be some kind of guideline, said Sen. Vance Broadbent. Senators also discussed the possibility of a planned student walkout or rally in January to protest the legislatures treatment of teachers. The U of U was not successful. It did not go through, said Retta Judd, ASSUSC academic vice president. She hopes that with a little planning, SUSCs action in January will make more of an impact, she said. or by-la- on-camp- us |