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Show Signpost May 1, 1979 l'age 2 Regents Board seeks student representative ASWSC Release Each year a student from a Utah college or university is chosen to serve on the Board of Regents for the State of Utah. This is the governing unit of all higher education in the state. This student member of the Board of Regents has a full voice on the board. "For this reason," said Greg Garfield, ASWSC President, "the individual who is chosen should be mature and willing to do a good job." The Utah Council of Student Body Presidents will recommend an individual to the Board of Regents after interviewing the applicants. Applications for interested students at Weber State College are due Friday, May 4. They should be turned in to Janet McFarlane, ASWSC Secretary, in the Union Building, Room 241. She also has further information for those who are interested. Garfield urges students to apply He said, "As a student regent you can have direct input in to student concerns." l W " : &&&& mm Pre-fabricated housing builder speaks today Better housing can be provided through factory methods of construction, said Blaine Wade, president and general manager of Intermountain Precision-Built Home, Inc., Ogden. Wade will speak today at noon in Room 199 of the Social Science Building as part of the "Management at High Noon" lecture series. Wade has pioneered many prefabricated housing ideas through his company. Chatonelle tryouts set BLAINE WADE Chatonelles tryouts will be held May 9 at 6 p.m. in the WSC gymnasium. Friday, May 4, is the last day permitted for students to withdraw from individual classes. LDS INSTITUTE presents HORIZONS IN THOUGHT THIS WEEK'S SPEAKER: DR. GARTH FISHER (Physical Fitness Authority at BYU) EVERY FRIDAY AT 12 NOON AT THE INSTITUTE NEXT WEEK'S HORIZONS SPEAKER: ROBERT CLARK (Institute Instructor) Anti-ERA woman lectures Thursday Phyllis Schlafly, founder and national chairman of "STOP ERA," will speak Thursday at a noon convocation in the Browning Center Main Auditorium. . Schlafly has testified before most of the state legislatures which defeated the Equal Rights Amendment, and has debated before many audiences with feminists who are for the Progressive Roch Ogden OPPORTUNITIES IN AEROSPACE MANUFACTURING Time Study Engineer Manufacturing Engineering SUNDSTRAND, a Fortune 500 Company, has an opening in our Denver, Colorado plant. This Division is involved in the manufacture of accessory hardware for the Aerospace industry. We are seeking an individual with an Associate or BS degree in Industrial Engineering, Industrial Management, Machine or Manufacturing Technology. You will be trained in time and motion study, estimating, establishing work standards, and productivity and efficiency techniques. You must possess the ability to deal and communicate with people. This will be a shift position. Sundstrand will also have a need for manufacturing engineers. If you meet the above requirements, are looking for a career position, want an excellent benefit package, and want to live in the heart of the Colorado Rockies whch provides an exciting array of recreational activities ranging from fishing, hunting, skiing and Broncomania . . . please send your resume today to: Jl ft l SUNDSTRRND J J Personnel Center SUNDSTRAND AVIATION 2480 W. 70th Avenue Denver, Colorado 80221 An Affirmative ActionEqual Opportunity Employer MFH amendment. Schlafly has a bachelor's degree from Washington University in St. Louis, Mo., and a master's from Harvard. She received her J.D. in 1978 from Washington University Law School. The public is invited to this free lecture. Trainer-director Marilyn Schiffman said 24 will be selected for the 1979-80 year. Present members will be required to audition on the same basis as newcomers, she added. Chatonelles perform at the intermission periods of football and basketball contests and appear in parades and other events. Schiffman said candidates must first attend four clinics in the WSC gym prior to the tryouts. They will be held today, tomorrow, Thursday, and May 8 at 8 p.m. Eligible to participate are high school seniors who will be full time WSC students next fall, along with any other girls now enrolled at Weber State. How does ASWSC spend student fees? by Beverly DeVoy Taggart Where have your student funds gone this year? Each student, when he or she registers, pays a $49 fee. Of that, student government receives $5 from every registered person. Where has the Associated Students of Weber State College allocated your money? According to the minutes of student govermment part of your money has been allocated to: $500 was allocated to the dorm residents to build a float, $500 was spent for Homecoming for fireworks, $360 went to the cheerleaders for gymnastic classes, The Dental Hygiene Program received $200 and a $500 student loan so 25 students could attend a convention in Los Angeles, Campus Organization for Planning Effectiveness was alloted $100 for its budget, $60 was aloocated to buy flowers for the President's reception, seven name tags, $1.25 each, for the student officers to serve as hosts at the President's reception, $600 was allocated to the Ombudsman to attend a convention,Associated Women Students was given $280 to attend a convention in Arizona, $200 was allocated to the Public Relations Board to attend a retreat, the soccer team received $186 for new uniforms, $50 went for a drawing account in the Skyroom for luncheons for student government, the cheerleaders received $250 for video tape to enter national competition, $15 was paid out to buy flowers for William P. 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