| OCR Text |
Show Page Two The Daily Utah Qirofiide. Tuesday, January r Pond NTRODUCING ii ' -- . vi . THERE--- - TlWe 17, 1978 K I I no tree mnc j KJOBIMDMIO Briefs Campus the new strong precision soft lens A breakthrough irt soft lens development, the Hydro curve II offers significantly improved tensile strength for longer lens life, combined with new standards of comfort in the thinnest lens in the industry. Extremely flexible... improved field of view and greater comfort Coma to the professionals at precision optical instant credit available 5 PRECISION OPTICAL - THE PROFESSIONAL PLAZA SUITE C 200 SALT LAKE CITY 555 EAST 4500 SOUTH - tOI 0668100 Books and Banter a Books and Banter will be Tuesday, 9:55 a.m. in OSH 255, Hinckley Caucus Room. Richard Rieke, director of the Department of Communication, will review the book Decision-Makin- g by Leon Mann and Irving L. Janis. The book concerns the conflict, choice and commitments involved in careers, marriage and divorce. Chicano students Tuesday Exchange The first Tuesday Exchange, an hour-lonopen discussion sponsored by the Women's Resource Center, will be Tuesday at noon in Union 293. The biweekly program is designed for students, faculty and staff wanting to contribute to the unstructured exchange of information, experiences and issues of both general and personal concern. Participants are encouraged to bring discussion topics to the exchange. Anne Nicoll, a counselor in the Women's Resource Center, will conduct the program. g L4 kfeV I ' III a J 0 fft a tm (More mm International students gJLreQlSeSl? ilnlUln)lilnl'.' Spend 90 minutes with the longshoremanphilosopher. Ctofc Hfdg "The Crowded Life" Produced by Wpbt , Miami, Fla. Tune in Tues, January 17th ,Time8:00 P.M. puBi n. KUED f.FPVO INTERESTED IN LAW SCHOOL? International Students Association meets Friday at 1:30 p.m. in Union 324. Leaders of various international student groups will discuss plans for international week which will take place in April. Eccles Fellowships The Graduate School of the University is accepting applications for the Marriner S. Eccles Graduate Fellowships $6500 full year stipends for qualified graduate students pursuing advanced study in fields related to public policy. The application deadline is March 1. The fellowships, established by an endowment from Utah financier and industrialist Eccles, are open to all students holding a bachelor's degree. They will be awarded on April 15 for use during the 1978-7academic year. Students in the fields of finance, banking, special problems 9 in law, social welfare, basic social problems, energy related studies, environmental problems and the impact of the humanities or education on public policy are eligible to apply. The fellowships are restricted to U.S. citizens. Applications, together withtranscripts of credit and letters of recommendation, must be filed with the fellowship office of the Graduate School not later than March 1. Formal admission to a department and the Graduate School of the University, with full approval to pursue a graduate degree, is requirement of the fellowship award. For more information, eligible students may contact the Graduate School office, Room 310 Park Building. The Chicano Students Association is planning a high school leadership conference for March, according to Frank Cordova, CSA president. CSA will meet Wednesday night at 7 p.m. in Union 322 to discuss plans for the conference. Students and faculty are invited to attend. "The main purpose of the leadership conference," Cordova said, "is to recruit more Chicano students to campus by showing them around the campus, orientate them and provide workshops from each department." "This is just one more of the ways CSA tries to involve the community in the University process by inviting them to come up and see for themselves what we do here," Cordova said. Plans will be made for Chicano Awareness Week, Cincode Mayo, and CSA elections, Cordova said. Cutler Energy Award Applications are now being accepted for the Garr Cutler Energy Award, a $1,000 cash prize for a graduate student paper which "makes the most significant contribution in the general area of energy development," according to a spokesman from the Graduate School of the University. The application deadline is March 31. The award is given annually from an endowment established by Dr. Garr Cutler of Eugene, Ore., and will be made in conjunction with the June commencement exercises. Eligibility for the award is based on the student having worked on the paper while in the graduate program at the University and that the student is the sole or principal author of the paper. The paper must be related to the broad field of energy development which includes ecological, sociological and legal matters relating to energy as well as problems in research and development of energy resources. The paper must be one which has been published, submitted for publication or written in a form suitable for publication. Each application must be endorsed by the student's research advisor, who will certify that the eligibility requirements are satisfied. Qualified students can pick up the application forms from the Graduate School office, Room 310 Park Building. J.C. McNeil O KCPX present ROCK-- ROLL REVIVAL N TV Attend a Discussion with BYU Law Faculty about BYU's Law School o o Rent a T V. $10mo Rent a Stereo $14mo. CALCULATOR Bu On' ALL IN THE SAME SHOW: CHUCK BERRY BO DIDDLEY DEL SHANNON MEETING: THURSDAY, JAN. 19 BUSINESS LECTURE HALL 205 2 to 4 PM Rent a Frig $5.50mo SHIRELLES THE COASTERS JAN & DEAN WOLFMAN JACK - FRIDAY, FEB. 3RD 7:30 P.M. at the SPECIAL EVENTS CENTER TICKETS: $6.50 & $5.50 $1.00 Discount to Students OUTLETS: S.E.C., TAPEHEAD, RASPBERRY, TOAD TAPE & ALL 3 ODYSSEY LOCATIONS A UNITED CONCERTS PRODUCTION Rent a Sewing Machine $8mo. Rent a Typewriter STOKES BR01HER3 $8mo. 675 So. State Street 531 0222 |