OCR Text |
Show The Daily Utah Chronicle, Tuesday, November 9, today a.nu 2 a.m. Metallurgy and Metallurgical Sk Engineering Seminar, Ralph M. Horton, Seminar, Doug Howard, WBB 212. 8 Philosophy Lecture, "Nuclear p.m. Travel Club Lecture, "Colombia," KH, Box Office: Deterrence: Some Moral Perplexities," 8 Gregory Kavka, BuL 101. U H 216. 4:30 p.m. Chemistry Seminar, Ron Estler, HEB 102. a.m. Fuels Engineering Undergraduate Noon t p.m. Middle East Center and Women's Resource Center Lecture, "Muslim Theological Attitudes Toward Family Planning," Donna Lee Bowen, Union 312. 3:20 p.m. Fuels Engineering Graduate Seminar, Noel H. deNevers, WBB 517. 4 p.m. Pharmaceutics Seminar, Richard Hsu, WBB 517. 11 TODAY Adams, Union 293. 9:55 Books and Banter, Utah Politics: The First 80 Years, "Dialogue With the Author and Analysts of 1982 Election," James B. Mayfield, OSH 255. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Phi Eta Sigma Open House, Union 323. 11 Page Three 1982 Noon Women's Resource Center Sack Lunch Seminar, "Equity and Social Justice, Afcsa 581-710- 0. p.m. Alliance Francaise concert, Jacques Yvart, Shaw Center, Westminster College. receives telecom grant The University, acting as an agent for many state agencies, has received a major grant from the National Telecommunications Information Agency in the Department of Commerce to expand a statewide telecommunications system. The $660,000 grant is the third grant the transportation and public safety departments' microwave system; provision for a two-wa- y audio and video microwave system between Salt Lake City and centers in rural Utah; an exchange of local and national program services among the state's public radio stations; and training programs among the eight regions of. the state utilizing two-wa- y audio and video communication lines. The grant also provides for: two new agency has given to the University, in coordination with several state organizations which are developing telecommunications in the state. With local matching dollars, from participating institutions, the total grant to the project exceeds SI million, according to Milton L. Davis, who is both project director and director of the University's Media Services. Funding from the grant will make possible: completion of FM public radio to rural Utah translators to replace two translators; two new TV translators to provide first-tim- e service to rural areas; five FM translators which will make possible extended service from USU; audio and video microwave equipment to provide rural communities with first-tim- e, multi-agenservices; and a pilot program for the handicapped. cy residents; completion of two links of the WHAT PHI ETA and national scholarships. Applications available at Open House. Local Notable reference for resumes. Recognition of scholastic achievement. Quarterly banquets featuring exceptional guest speakers. ADMISSION REQUIREMENT 3.5 GPAduringonequarterofyourfreshmanyear qualifies you to join anytime during your attend- ance at the News From Other U's three times the number of students they from College Press Service accomodated last semester, and offering some course sections only annually. TAMPA, Fla. Florida's Ethics Commission has recommended that the president of Business and high-tec- h disciplines are particularly crowded, administrators sav, while classes in departments are being cut to save money. Budget cuts, moreover, leave schools without the funds to hire new teachers or buy new equipment for the overcrowded courses. sus- pended without pay for 90 days for sexually harassing administrators, staffers and students at Hillsborough and Miami-Dad- e Community College over a period of 1 1 years. less-popu- The school's board of trustees will now decide Dr. Ambrose Garner's exact punishment. Garner has been suspended with pay lar "It's not all rosy here," Robert Dunham, vice since April, when the state Ethics Commission began considering Garner's case. president for undergraduate studies at Penn U. Dr. Lowell Bennion, Executive Director of the Community Services Council, will be our speaker for the banquet. Dr. Bennion was also the former Associate Dean of Students at our University. The banquet will be held Thursday. Dec. 2, at the Salt Lake Hilton. For more information, an Open House will be held Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 9 & 10, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. in the Union Building, Room 323, or call: Uly Rona Don Riehlman Colleen Paul Angie Layton Rod Flynn impossible to get into some classes unless they can prove it's necessary for their degree completion. ALFRED, N.Y. The mother of an Alfred University student who died during a 1978 hazing incident has settled out of court with the fraternity, and dropped charges she had pending against the university. Ethics Commission, recalled Bonnie Williams, the commission's deputy executive director. Soon after the complaint was filed, "12 or 13 other women" who had worked with Garner at Hillsborough and previously at Miami-Dad- e made similar complaints, Williams said. "In his office or after a business lunch," Williams said of the complaints, "he would suddenly grab the women, kiss them and stick his tongue in their mouths." long-unresolv- 272-475- 4 582-316- 3 State of the Arts will appear in this Friday's Chronicle, Featured in the issue will be Tay Haines' story about the Performing Danscompany's fifth anniversary. ng Stevens' son, Chuck, died in 1978 after a Klan Alpine fraternity initiation where he was forced to drink large quantities of alcohol and ride around in the trunk of a car. Klan Alpine has since dropped its hazing activities, and Alfred University sources report that the school has stepped up efforts to control such initiation practices. SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS5) so-call- ed Hillsborough. "It is as if nothing has happened as far as our operation is concerned." ST. LOUIS, Mo. Students contesting a $7 activity fee increase at the University of University of Idaho adminsitrators, scrambling for ways to survive their second straight semester of funding cuts, have settled on a controversial new slash: ending EVENING CLINIC OBSTETRICS and GYNECOLOGY Missouri-S- t. Louis say they are prepared to use a tax revolt law to sue school officials to rescind the increase and allow a student vote before it is student evaluations of their teachers' reimplemented. . performance. Students claim the increase violates a 1980 constitutional change, called the Hancock WEDNESDAY EVENINGS 0 p.m. 5:30-9:3- Clinic B Amendment, which requires "political subdivisions" to get voter approval before raising taxes or fees. Such tax revolt laws were avidly opposed by educators during their 0. heyday of 1978-198- ; Two years ago UMSL curators approved a activity fee increase to be instituted over a two-yeperiod. Last fall the old $27 fee was increased to $35, followed by the $7 increase this fall. ; ;;v v,r. ' S15 , University Hospital Offering Counseling and Treatment for: Gynecologic Problems Obstetrical Care Family Planning Birth Control ar Indeed, evaluations once hailed as the very definition of the college consumer movement-h- ave been abandoned by a number of schools on administrators to end evaluation programs. Campuses across the country are cutting back on the number of courses they're offering, overcrowding classrooms with two and even 0 ed anti-hazi- said the incident hasn't changed much at trying to save money this fall. Moreover, professors, who complain that students aren't qualified to judge them, arejnereasing pressure 7 295-808- Due to the Veteran's Day holiday Thursday "The purpose of my lawsuit was to obtain all the information connected with my son's death and to have some questions answered," said Eileen Stevens, who turned the crusade. tragedy into a national Gmuer is suing to get her old job back and added that Hillsborough "didn't have a written policy on sexual harassment. They still don't have a policy." Hillsborough spokesman Leonard Brown V; 6 number, and students find it virtually Gmuer filed suit and complained to the "It was a tough decision," according to Faculty Secretary Bruce Bray, who recommended cutting the evaluations. ': "When your budget is cut every year, sometimes three or four times a year, you start But I asking yourself, 'Which arm can I spare?' a classroom than leaving still think rather empty, the evaluations are the lesser of two evils." : J 278-701532-521- having a rush in economics and advertising." Consequently, classes that used to have 25 students now have three to four times that Dr. Rosanne Gmuer, then Hillsborough's director of International Research, claimed last January that Garner told her, "I want to go to bed with you." Gmuer refused and was fired in March. . of State University said. "We've been hit heavily in engineering, business and computer science areas, and even the college of arts and sciences is Garner has denied harassing the five women, who claim they all suffered some kind of consequence for rejecting Garner's alleged advances. MOSCOW, Idaho U FALL BANQUET President faces suspension Hillsborough Community College be SIGMA PROVIDES :. But students argue the university is a political subdivision as defined in the constitution, and therefore had no right to raise the fees without student consent. While it's probably too late to do anything about the first $8 increase, they say the school is clearly wrong in imposing the most recent fee hike. Sliding fee scale based upon income & resources CALL NOW FOR APPOINTMENT 581-27- 19 No Parking Problems |