OCR Text |
Show Page 2 The Thxmderbvrd Monday April 29, 1985 GOOD NEWS! GOOD NEWS! RexLee set to lecture GOOD NEWS! GOOD NEWS! THE COLLEGE ARMS APARTMENTS ARE BEING COMPLETELY REMODELED EVERYTHING FROM THE FURNACE TO DRAPES ARE ! BEING REPLACED! SUMMER MONTHS RENT WILL BE ONE HALF! DONT FORGET ABOUT HOUSING FOR FALL! COME SEE AND LIVE AT THE BEAUTIFUL COLLEGE ARMS LOCATED AT 2ND SOUTH & DEWEY FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT. DR. RICH AT 586-888- 1 DEJZZHVniJ'D 86 SOUTH MAIN STREET cn 173 586-676- 1 ! ; BUY ONE STEAK AND SHRIMP DINNER AND GET ONE TREE AT SULLIVAN'S j I A Rex Lee, solicitor general of the United States, will speak on jurisprudence and its relation to the humanities m SUSCs Convocation lecture Thursday. Lees presentation is this years lecture on human values. The 1 program is slated to begin at 1 a.m. in the Auditorium. Jurisprudence is often overlooked as one of the humanities, said Eugene Woolf, director of the SUSC Tanner Center. While law does not create values, it does focus them. Woolf is also the chairman of the Grace Adams Tanner Lecture Series. As solicitor general, Lee is responsible for representing the United States and the federal government in cases heard by the U.S. Supreme Court. Prior to his appointment on Aug. 6, 1981, Lee served as founding dean of the J. Reuben Clark Law School at Brigham Young University. From 1975 to 1977, Lee was assistant attorney general, civil division, for the U.S. Department of Justice, after which he returned to his deanship at BYU. He also served as the law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Byron White during the 1963 term of the Supreme Court. He became an associate in the law firm of Jennings, Strouss, Salmon and Trask in Phoenix, Ariz., m 1964, and became a partner in 1967. Lee grew up in St. Johns, Arizona. He received a bachelor of arts degree from BYU, and a law degree from the University of Chicago Law School. Night sprinklers planned (SALAD BAR & LOUNGE) EXPIRES MAY 31, 1985 LIMIT 1 COUPON PER TABLE SUSC DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE & DANCE WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF MUSIC PRESENTS: CilLRFRTS & SULLIVANS COMIC OPERA Dodging water sprays as you are going to class will not be a problem for long, according to Gordon Slack, director of the physical plant. Money appropriated by the 1985 State Legislature to address the SUSCs building settlement problem includes funding to install a new automatic sprinkler system which will allow the watering of the campus lawns at night, Slack said. Night-tim- e watering of the lawns will not only be more convenient for people walking on campus, it will provide a considerable cost savings since it will eliminate the need for personnel to manually turn the water on and off, and will significantly reduce the amount of water needed since evaporation will be reduced by sprinkling at night instead of during the day. We have made a legislative request for an automatic sprinkler system nearly every year for more than a decade, but we were not successful until this year, Slack said. The settlement appropriation, including the planned automatic sprinkler system, was approved by the Board of Regents, but gained only partial support from Gov. Bangerter and the Utah Building Board, both recommending that only half the package be approved this year, which would have effectively eliminated the automatic sprinkler system. Support for full funding for the project from the legislative analyst, and a personal appeal by President Gerald Sherratt to the legislative committee reviewing the project, eventually won legislative approval, said Michael D. Richards, vice president for college relations. U N Graduation Anhouncements bykfcylarte L i Hf TU-- AS & nI: T nY. ''W' VC .' 1 3 '"Ths't 8:00 PM SUSC MAINSTAGE FREE ADMISSION TO ALL SUSC STUDENTS WITH I.D. FOR TICKET INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS CALL BOX OFFICE AT 586-787- 6 BETWEEN 1:00 PM & 5:00 PM WEEKDAYS We dont want you to be short on this special occasion-S- o place your order as soon as possible at the S.U.S.C. BookstoRe Ask for Kathy jA |