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Show iimiiiiiiiiii!iiiiii'i:!!:iiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiii:ii DESERET Booker TOP TEN NATIONALLY BRYAN GRAY Young American Writer Beatles Back Get The Let 2. Aquarius Sunshine In Dimension Fifth Happy Mercy 4. Hair Cowsills 5. Oh Happy Day Ed-- cording j win Hawkins Singers Is- 6. It's Your Thing Brothers ley Donovan 7. Atlantis Time is too tight for Booker T. ae.d the M.G 's to give any personal perform s. The The reason musicians are more a sound than they are a group' T. Booker and the M G.'s (M.G. .stands for Memphis curGroup), rently ruling h i g ' with "Time Is Tight u..e favorite of manv nown celebrities, are hired Records. hands of Stax-VoAs part of their job, the long-well- Simon 8. The Boxer & Garfunkel h 9. Gitarzan vens Ste- Ray Guess LOCALLY Cheerleader USA, Traci Anderson, impressed with Clearfield's yells, gets tips from students. Miss (KNAK) Soul Phip and Chip Fuller. cheers are designed to increase crowd involvement it givps enthusiastic audible to cheerleaders. response like the Oh, Something yea! jazz. One purpose of the clinic was to teach students the psychology of cheerleading. Part of the itinerary called for them to respond to pressured situations e.g. what to do when there is a lull in play caused by an injury and time is called. Mercy Guess 6. These Eyes Who Happy 7. Gitaiban Ray Pe- terson The 8. Where's Play- Glen ground Campbell 9. More Today Than Spiral Yesterday Staircase 10. It's Your Thing Brothers other them." Why is his group so popu- lar? Ids the feel we have for our music, he says. And the group attempts to have the same feel for the singers music for. they play back-uMusical workhorses, the group often will start recording at noon and then carry on for fourteen or fifteen hours. The group did break tradition last year when it went on a performing tour of England, is-l- ey in Atlanta, DISC HI' DAT and the memoets were amazed to discover how popular they were in Britain. One muiic critic wrote that Eook-e- r T. and the M G. were thp pop equivalent cf the Royal the Philharmonic Orchestra cream of musicians in a gieat luxurious .nass," Booker T. (Jones), a soul musician before joining the group in 1967. is the 24 year old leader of the group. He plays adroitly instillments Dad singer Dennis Yost and b'ss Wally guil.ilM Eaton weie in thp car when the mishap ou lined rai slippery road surtaie Yot suffered cuts and bruises, hut was released the nev day. suffered Eaton, however, serious multiple injuries and will he out of the group for six months (the group appeals at Lagoon in June) The other membeis of the Classns IV Had already proceeded to the groups evening in engagement Jackson, Miss., thinking that Yost and 23, 1969 C3 Eaton had missed the airplane and would catch up with them later. The Creedenee Clc irwa-te- r Revival show at the Salt Palace was a v hopping 7,000 fans at $4 per tnket. Tins was about four times the number who saw die group in their peitcrm-mic- e last fail at The Terrace. uc-ip- many guitar, bass, organ, piano, saxophone,a trombone and vibes. He's graduate of Indiana University- Steve Cropper studied mechanical engineering at Memphis State University hefoie deciding or. a music career A household word to many British music fail, he won 5t!i phie this year among top musicians m the Miody Mak-ei- s international pop poll. an accomJaikson. drummer, plished early in music playing in his orchestra. fathers He later joined a jazz group i ailed the Jazz Prophets beA1 e fore coming to work for Stax-Vol- t. The bass Imps lieaid in the Memphis Sound is the woik of Duck" Dunn, a old Memphis man who taught lumsplf to play bass as a high school student. Two members of thp Classics IV, featured in this column three weeks ago, were injured in an auto accident this weekend while returning re home from an CAREER CORNER llllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllll! Take Your Pick class beginning June 1st in Salt Lake. AGES: 18 thru 26. Those accepted are GUARANTEED a Stewardess position with a major airlines. You may keep your present job duringtrainmg. g FOR FREE APPLICATION Beatles Three Dog 3. One Night 4. Morning Girl Neon Philharmonic 5. Love Can Make You ilBH Stewardess Back Paul Re2. Let Me vere and Raiders Get Fans Involved Via Soul Cheers Yelling was really serious business to 548 students from all over the state as far south as Blanding and north who attended the as Irogiin Utah High School Activities Association annual eheerlead-in- ? clinic, last weekend. Four cheerleaders from the Utah School for the Deaf also attended. A highlight of the day was participation in soul cheers which was directed by Miss Cheerleader USA, Traci Anderson, and twin cheerleaders Get 1. com roses songfor and singers play back-umusic for all of the Stax-VoRecords. The group is literally the Memphis Sound" that include such a roster a Sam and Dave Ois Redding, Eddie Floyd and Carla Thomas. Booker T. explains First and foremost our job is to get the companys records to sell. If we vanish, then you look around for musicians who understand Memphis music and them aren't many of group 10. These Eyes Who esion Ga ante 3. Love Can Make You ? A Sound! R (Billboctd) 1. Is NEWS, Friday, May Of Activities The Thunderbird Youth Cul- ture Center, 44 N. 3rd. West, has the right idea about enter- taining youth for summer WRITE TO: ' NORTH AMERICAN AIRLINE SCHOOLS inc. 1518 South 1100 East Salt Lake City. Utah 84105 months. May 31 they are holding a conference (starts at 1 :30 p.m.) to let teens vote on activities they would like the Center to sponsor. No matter take what your interest your pick! Ron Swan at the is willing to Thunderbird schedule to your liking. 'Earthlings' Dig Up Better Salaries By JOYCE LAIN R. T. Chapman, San Antonio, Tex., asks: What do geologists do? Any new career opportuni- ties? A. Compared to 20th Cen- tury physics and biology, the e geology was a Strauss waltz; our globe was regarded as essentially earth-scienc- unchanging. Then, just a couple of short povv! Geoscienyears ago tists found new evidence strongly suggesting our earth is really one powerhouse rock n roll scene of constantly moving continents. Implications of the new turbulent activity theories are enormous: Is this the clue to the causes of earthquakes and volcanoes? Can we now develop better leads to locating the oil, minerals and water needed for an expanding and increasingly industrialized world population? Many geologists think yes" and today earth science has become another new frontier of knowledge, stirring fresh excitement as a career choice. THUMBNAIL. This is oversimplified, but in general, the geologist (1) does field for work, usually drilling samples of physical materials, (2) analyzes geological specimens in a lab, and (3) prepares reports on his findings. Most geologists specialize. OF FECENT VINTAGE. Other geologists specialize in new fields requiring both geology and other sciences, such who are as geophysicists, mostly oil explorers . WHERE ON EARTH? About 25,000 geologists are employed today. They work for private industry (oil, gas, mining, railroads, companies, chemical, cement and ceramic Industries, banks and investment firms); federal. state and local governments (biggest employer here the U.S. Geological and S u r v ey) ; teaching research institutions; nr aie consultants. EDUCATIONAL REQUIREMENTS. Briefly, a masters degree or doctorate is advisable. REWARDS: The National Register of Scientific Personnel savs 1968 median salaries were $12,0xi with a masters degree: $14,000 with a Ph.D. Ten per rent of all geologists received as much as $26 000 and a few top men received considerable more Send your suggestion- - for future column topics to Joyce Iain, Career Corner, in care of Deseret New s, Bex 125, Salt take City, 81110. Sorry, no mail answers can be given. New reader Any Deseret long-soug- 2 packs a day take years away FACE THE TRUTH ABOUT SMOKING Smoking two packs of cigarettes a day can shorten your life by eight yearsl The Facts are: 1. The risk of earlier death is 70 higher for men who smoke cigarettes than for men who do not. The risk is significantly higher, also, for women who smoke than for those who do not. 2. The risk cf death from lung cancer is more than 10 times greater for cigarette smokers than for nonsmokers. 3. The risk of death from bronchitis and emphysema is 6 times greater. 4. The risk ot death from coronary heart disease is 70 greater. 5. The greater the number of cigarettes smoked daily, the higher the death rate. 6. The risk is greater for those who start smoking at young ages and greater for those who inhale. "1968 Review, th Haltn Consequences scienu-tby the Public Health Service in consultation United Sdtes. the throughout Ronrt-tt'He- wh FOR THE LOVE OF LIFE, s of Rmobing and physic prepared uni DONT SMOKE! 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