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Show SUSC THE THUNDERBIRD TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1990 PAGE 7 Parking sticker policy changed BY TYLER JENSEN SU Campus Security recently instituted an updated policy regarding parking stickers, with fines ranging as high as $25 or more. Last fall, students were required to pay for parking stickers before picking them up at Campus Security. The decals, $6 for the full year, should now be picked up before payment is made at the Cashiers Office. The new procedure has been in place since January 1990. To obtain decals, students should first go to Campus Security in the Physical Plant building. Students will be given information sheets to fill out about their vehicles before stickers will be handed out. Parking stickers should be placed on the inside of the windshield on the drivers side. The $6 fee will be placed immediately on the students record as a debt, so payment should be made after receiving the sticker. All vehicles parked on campus are required to have a parking sticker. Without them, parking fines ranging from $5 for lack of a parking sticker, to $25 for parking in a handicapped zone. An additional $5 is charged if the ticket is unpaid after 30 days. Security will begin issuing citations on Oct. 3, so students have until then to obtain decals without consequence. Campus Security is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. For more information, contact them at 586-779- 3. . One of 600 freshmen students entering moving in to SUs Juniper Hall. Holt, one of SUSCs Residence Halls. Other shrink and the prospect of new student SUSC this fall, Renee Holt, a theatre arts major from South Jordan, begins the process of drawn to SUSC by the Utah Shakespearean Festival, found an empty bed in SU students may not be so lucky, however, as Cedar Citys available Housing continues to well-know- n housing developments appears dim. Convocation lineup includes controversial issues From the controvery over 2 Live Crew to the conflict in the Middle East, the fall quarter lineup of lectures g Covocation series will be as for SUSCs headlines. as timely todays The 10 lectures are scheduled in the Auditorium at 11 a.m. on Thursdays. This falls series ranges from entertaining to controversial, said Lana Johnson, Covocation coordinator. The series will both inform and challenge audiences to think to form their own ideas on crucial issues, she said. Larry Speakes, former White House spokesman for President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1987, will begin the fall series on Thursday with Election 1990. After leaving the White House in 1987, Speakes became senior vice president of Merril Lynch and Co. where he directed the companys worldwide communications and g advertising program. His Speaking Out, was published in May 1988. On Oct. 4, lawyer turned psychiatrist Lynne D. Finney will present Understanding and Healing Sexual Abuse. Finney chronicled her own experiences as a sexually-abuse- d child in her book Reach for the Rainbow: Advanced Healing for Survivors of Sexual Abuse. Speaking as a survivor, she will share her own struggles and triumphs in overcoming the impact of sexual abuse and add an element of optimism to the treatment of this topic. SUSC alumnus Michael O. Leavitt will be the Homecoming Week speaker on Oct. 11. Leavitt is president and chief executive officer of the Leavitt Group and serves on numerous corporate boards. He has a deep interest in education and has focused his community activities on boards and committees involved in Utahs education systems. He was chair of SUSCs Institutional Council for four years and currently serves on the State Board of Regents. Culture and Community: Reclaiming Ourselves will be the topic of the Oct. 18 Convocation by leadership consultant and activist Si Kahn. For 25 years, Kahn award-winnin- best-sellin- has worked as a civil rights community organizer in the American South. Kahn is currently the executive director of Grassroots team of experienced Leadership, a multi-racia- l organizers working with communities and organizations throughout the South, and is the author of two books How People Get Power and published by McGraw-Hill- : Organizing: A Guide for Grassroots Leaders. Audiences on Oct. 25 will see a combination lecture demonstration featuring the music of Galen Abdur-Razzaq- s e ensemble. SaudLive Jazz!, a has Hailed as sensational in his artistry, Abdur-Razza- q performed and recorded with Melba Moore, Houston Person and Gwen Guthrie. The Nov. 1 Convocation will be a teleconference four-piec- This falls series ranges from entertaining to controversial. The series will both inform and challenge audiences to think to form their own ideas on crucial issues said Convocation Coordinator Lana Johnson. featuring Peter F. Drucker addressing The Changing Corporation. Drucker is a consultant in economic and business policy and in management organization. He has been Clarke Professor of Social Science at Claremont Graduate School since 1971. Prior to that, he was professor of management at the Graduate Business School of New York University, where he is currently a distinguished university lecturer. He has written extensively on politics and economics, with books published in more that 20 foreign languages and is an editorial columnist for the Wall Street Journal. The conference will be broadcast from San Francisco. The International Week lecture on Nov. 8 will focus on the Middle East with a lecture by author and journalist Robin B. Wright. Currently a senior State Department correspondent for the Los Angeles Times, Wright will address the subject of Conflict, Religion and Politics in the Middle East. Wright has worked with the BBC, Reuters and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and is the author of two books: Sacred Rage: The Wrath of Militant Islam, and In the Name of God: The Khomeini Decade. Her lecture will focus on Iran, Khomeini and their impact on both the region and the world. The lecture is by the Multicultural Center. Should kids be protected from obscene lyrics? Are performers having their First Amendment rights restricted or even violated? The Nov. 15 Convocation will be a debate on the subject between Miami-base- d attorney Jack Thompson and former Doors manager Bill Siddons. Thompson is considered North Americas leader and driving force behind the national campaign against obscenity in popular music. To date, he has successfully banned 2 Live Crews album As Nasty As They Wanna Be in six counties and two countries. As manager of the legendary band The Doors, Siddons confronted obscenity charges brought against lead singer Jim Morrison and has debated the PMRC, the Moral Majority and others over the past decade. The Distiguished Faculty Honor Lecture will be presented by Alan Hamlin, associate professor of business and finance, on Nov. 29. Hamlins subject will be From College to Corporation: The Impact of Recent Social and Economic Trends on American Institutions of Higher Education. He will analyze the present and future of Americas colleges and universities in the light of social and global economic forces. Internationally-know- n spiritual educator Father Leo Booth will address the subject of addiction in the final Covocation of fall quarter on Dec. 6. Booth lectures, conducts spirituality groups and aids in the treatment of hospitalized, chemically dependent patients. |