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Show THE SALT LAKE TIMES USU, U of U Date Annual Battle Saturday in S.L. The old adage, Therell be no holds barred, will certainly apply this Saturday when Utah States Aggies and Utah's Run-ni-n Redskins square off in the annual bloodletter in 30,000-seUte Stadium in Salt Lake City. One of the oldest football series in the nation, the annual tiffs between the two schools date back to 1892. USU won that but since then the game 12-Utes have dominated the series. They have won 44 encounters, while the Utags have won 15 and 4 have ended in deadlocks. USU will go into Saturdays 1:30 p.m. contest with much better season record and with a chance at some post season bowl action. This will only serve to whet the Utes appetite for an upset, however. at 0, Program to Place Job Corps Grads Now Under Way A continuing program to place Job Corps graduates in jobs is getting underway this month with the combined efforts of business and industry, education and government. The first young men are com- pleting their training in the unique residential-educationcenters set up by Job Corps, a major youth program in the Presidents War on Poverty. The mens and women's urban Job Corps centers are operated under contract by major corporations, leading universities and colleges, and state agencies. This unique combination of training skills provides the assurance of al a graduate. The rate of graduations will well-traine- d 9-- 6-- 0. 8-- 25-2- 3. 3-- 35-1- 9. All-Ameri- ca 6-- 0, 197-pou- nd Rod-ma- STRAIGHT KENTUCKY BOURBON WHISKY ANCIENT AGE DISTILLING CO.. 86 PROOF FRANKFORT, KY. . roughs Corporation, Xerox and Westinghouse Air Brake. American businessmen will receive information about the availability of Job Corps graduates by direct mail, through local and regional business and industry councils, and by various American business leaders. Nearly 14,000 young men and women now are in training in Job Corps centers. In addition to the eight mens urban training centers and the five womens centers now in operation, Job Corps also operates 54 conservation centers, where young men are receiving basic education and work skill training through ing long-neede- d do- conservation work. Additional centers will open during the coming months. TncientStoe V BOURBON VC? AMERICAS URGEST SELLING 6 YEAR OLD KENTUCKY BOURBON Princeton Professor Will Speak at East-WeInstitute Former Peace Corps Official Directs Statewide U. Programs st increase rapidly until the spring of 1966 when it is estimated that records Reason 5,000 young men and women will Traditionally be have meant very little in this graduating from centers each contest. The game is almost an month. When these young men and entire season to both teams, and women upsets have been more the rule graduate they will have the work skill training which than the exception. Good recent examples were will fit them for many occupa1960 and 1963. In 1960 USU was tions in which there is a present gliding along with a perfect 0 and foreseeable need. The Job record and looking to their first Corps training also provides undefeated, untied season in basic education and the developnearly half a century. The Utes ment of proper work habits and smashed those hopes, as they attitudes. blanked the Aggies Early graduates from Job Then in 1963, USU entered the Corps centers have been placed contest with an 1 record and in such occupations as retail definite post season bowl hopes. sales, welding, office and clerical Again Utah upset the USU apple- work, food service and preparacart, as the Utes outlasted Bill tion, machine shop, auto and small appliance repair. Munson and the Aggies These graduates have demonUSU has pulled some upsets their value to their new strated in the series too, however, as the 1954 contest proves. That employers and it is anticipated source of trained emyear USU came into the game that thiswill be a welcome addiwith a poor 6 record but rose ployees to tion the American work force. up and smote the Utes Regional meetings of business This is the highest score an Aggie and industry leaders have been team has compiled against Utah scheduled during the first half of since the inception of the series. the West Coast and The Utes high point output was November states at the Mountain 47-0 Rocky a pasting of USU in 1944. Parks at Job Center Pleasanton, candidate Roy on California November 3; the be main Shivers will USUs states Eastern at Rodman the threat in Saturdays contest. The Bedspeedster is cur- Job Corps Center at onNew NovemMassachusetts rently near the top nationally ford, Middle ber Western and the 5, in both rushing and scoring. the Custer Job Corps Other Utags who should prove states at Center at Battle tough on the Utes are quarter- on November 12.Creek, Michigan back Ron Edwards, fullback GerThe Parks Center is operated ald Watson, center Ken Ferguson and ends Jim LeMoine and by Litton Industries, Inc.; Cus- n Dave Clark on offense, and Ron ter by U.S. Industries, and by IBMs Science Research Sbranti, Bill Staley, MacArthur Associates. Other business firms Lane and Henry King on defense. involved in Utah will be paced by quarter- - centers are operating Job Corps ITTs Federal Electric Corporation, Ford Motor Companys Philco Corporation, Packard Bell Electronics, Bur. Pagt Nlnt FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1965 backs Rich Groth and Jack Gehrke, halfback Ben Woodson, wingback Gary Heard and fullback Marv Lowery offensively, and lineman John Stipech, Pat McKissick and Greg Kent Dr. Kenneth K. S. Chen, professor of Religion and Oriental Studies at Princeton University, will be featured speaker at the Instifourth annual East-WeDr. Daryl tute December Chase, president, Utah State University, announced today. An authority on Buddhism, Dr. Chen taught, lectured and conducted research at the University of Hawaii, Yenching University, Harvard and the University of California before joining the faculty of Princeton University as a Professor of Religion in 1961. In 1963 he also became a member of the Department of Oriental Studies. His field of special concentration is the History of Buddhism in China during the Period of Disunity and the Period of the Tang Dynasty which together cover the fourth to the ninth centuries A.D. A native Utahns, recently re- cation at University of Utah. He lumed from Washington, D.C., succeeds Harold W. Bentley, who his week assumes responsibility retired as dean in 1964. Grant for classes, discussion groups, I. Holt, who has served as acting films and other educational and dean since 1964, has been ap- st 2-- 3, community development services pointed associate dean. Dean Madsen was serving reaching virtually every county in Utah and many distant parts as director of training for VISTA, ;he domestic Peace Corps, at the of the world. He is Dr. Brigham D. Madsen, time of his appointment. Previ- I a former history professor, busi- ously, he was assistant director nessman and Peace Corps execu- of Peace Corps training and Unitive who resigned his govern- versity relations programs, with ment post to become dean of which he has been associated the Division of Continuing Edu- - since 1963. He is married to the former Betty McAllister, and they are the parents of four Hurt children. Phony Surveys In his new position, Dean Honest Marketing Madsen will administer evening, Phony consumer surveys, used and adult as a smoke screen to hide sales home study, television Audio-VisuButhe classes; approaches, are causing great reau; Institutes for Urban Stuconcern among marketing peodies, Technological Training and ple, according to a Utah sales Industrial Relations; an extenIn 1963 Dr. Chen received executive. series of sive cultural and enterArthur S. Anderson, president tainment the Lindback Award for Distinprograms; a Bureau Sales and Marketing Execu- of guished Teaching at Princeton. of Community Development and The following year he was a tives of Utah, said it is feared the Intermountain Laboratory in to being an imFulbright Research Professor at that in addition Development. on citizens, this will Group Residents Kyoto University and concur- position of. many Utah comto get' vitally munities are rently held a Guggenheim Fel- make it difficult continuing and information in genulowship for research on Chinese important their education broadening Buddhism in Japan and Taiwan. ine surveys. and discussion classes through Housewives should feel comAfter receiving his B.A. degree offered groups by the division from the University of Hawaii pletely justified in responding through the mail and traveling in 1931 he worked toward his with a firm No to salesmen representatives. Masters degree at Yenching Uni- who use decitful or camouflaged In addition, assistance in comMr. Anderson said. versity where his main interest approaches, program is He said these are becoming munity development centered on the cultural relations to such areas as Park provided between China and Europe. He especially prevalent in telephone City, Kearns, Clearfield, Spring-dal- e received his M.A. degree in 1934 and door to door selling. and several Indian comOne technique is to mention munities and remained at Yenching two in Eastern and Southmore years as an instructor in the name of a high sounding re- ern Utah. firm then ask the house History before returning to the search a wife long list of questions of University of Hawaii as an in- her appliances and furniture anc structor of Chinese from 1936-194how long she has had them. The salesman then checks her He returned "to Yenching for credit rating and if it is gooc graduate studies in Buddhism calls back and tells her she has with primary interest in the cula tural relations between India and gift coming for being so cooperative in the survey. China. The housewife learns, howCalifornia-YenchinExg As a ever, that she must bring her change Scholar he studied in husband and call at the place of 1940-4- 1 at the University of to pick up her prize. business California in Berkeley and from Once there, she and her husthen until 1946 at Harvard as a Harvard-Yenchin- g Fellow ma- band are subjected to a hard sell by a salesman who is armed joring in Buddhism and Indie with Philology. He received his Ph.D. she knowledge about the items doesnt have or items which from that institution in 1946, and are perhaps several years old and remained another year as a Rethus ripe for replacement. search Fellow. His doctoral disMr. Anderson said there has sertation was entitled A study a rash of this lately and it been of the Svagata Story in the is making people skeptical when in its Sanscrit, Pali, Tibetan and Chinese Versions. legitimate surveyors call. He Dr. Chen returned to Yen- pointed out that genuine consumer surveys result in benefits ching in 1947 to accept the posi- to the consumer by measuring tion of history professor. He became, concurrently, assistant di- the demand for various products and services. rector of the Harvard-Yenchin- g This type of survey is extenInstitute and executive secretary of the Institutes office in Pe- sively used by businessmen who strive to improve the goods and king. services, bringing them in line Dr. Chen remained at Yen- with peoples wants. ching until 1949, then served in As he mentioned a 1949-5- 0 as a Visiting Professor local examples newspaper survey conductat Lingnan University in Canton, ed every for the benefit of and in the summer of the latter businessesyear consumers. and year in the same capacity at the The TV industry also uses University of Hawaiis summer survey techinques extensively to session. deetrmine which programs are For the next years he was a popular, he said. Visiting Lecturer in Far EastLegitimate surveyors are after ern Languages at Harvard, and information only, and dont infrom 1958 until he went to Prin- tend to use it in any direct sellceton in 1961, he was a Professor ing approach. of Oriental Languages at the University of California, Los scholastic society; Phi Tau Phi; Angeles, and acting chairman Chinese national honor society; of the Department of Oriental American Oriental Society; AsLanguages for his last two years. sociation for Asian Studies, and At Princeton he offers courses the Association for the Study of in Hinayana Buddhism, Maha-yan- a Religion. Professor Chen was born in Buddhism, and conducts a seminar in Buddhism: He is the Honolulu and was married in author of numerous articles on Peking to the former Chao-Yin- g Buddhism and Orientalia and is Tan, who, at one time, was an author of a volume, Buddhism assistant Professor of Chinese in China, A Historical Survey. at Yenching University. They Dr. Chen is a member of Phi have two children, Sylvia and Olympia trrwlrj Ca, Olympia, WaiK OJy Beta Kappa; Phi Kappa Phi, Leighton. al - 0. Div-yavada- na the beer of good taste 14-- |