OCR Text |
Show OiromcU Paqe Focr ThtRsdAy, January 14, Court Items for the Chronicle events calendar should be submitted two days before the event, before 4 p.m. at the Chronicle offices, Union 240. The items should be typed or printed legibly on a form obtained from the Chronicle. Please note that the calendar, or portions of it, may be cut due to space limitations. p.m., Black Student Union Meeting, Union 319. 2:15 p.m., Anthropology Colloquium, ST 1 215. 3:20 p.m., Fuels engineering graduate seminar, "Some Synthetic Approaches to High Density Jet Fuels," WBB 207. 4 p.m., "Instantons as a Source Today a.m., Greek Orthodox Young Adult League (GOYAL) Social, Union 411. 11 a.m., Geometries seminar, EMC 112. 11 a.m., Chemistry seminar, "Reactive 11 Intermediates in Organic Synthesis," Chemistry Building 2006. Noon, Middle East Center brown bag film, Anou Banou: The Daughters of Utopia, MEC 15D. Noon, Single parents tax workshop, Women's Resource Center, Union 293. Noon, Narcotics Anonymous Meeting, Union 312. Polyace-tylene- 4 p.m., Bioengineering seminar, "Remote Fiberoptics Immunosenors: A Progress Report," MEB 2325. 4 p.m., "Crustal extension in the Death Valley region," Warren Hamilton, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, EMB 103. 7 p.m., Free Italian Cinema: Love and Anarchy, OSH Auditorium. 7:30 p.m., Amnesty International Meeting, Union 319. WINTER FRATERNITY RUSH January 20, 21, 22 from 5 pm For more information or call of ," Optical Properties of Dr A. Aeeger, department of physics, University of California at Santa Barbara, JCF 102. Non-Line- ar 581-806- g6-tb:27- and Procedures. The two ASUU Assembly members feel the guidelines are ambiguous "Our modifications clarify these regulations so Jthat- - we have a 100 percent guarantee of freedom of the press, freedom of speech and complete editor control of the newspaper, as it should be," Amiot said. The passage which reads, "The (Publications) Council welcomes the opportunity to give advice in these matters, which, under no circumstances, should constitute control or censorship" was cited by Amiot as being FREE "The intent of the passage was to reinforce First Amendment guarantees," Gibson said. "We met with legal counsel and put those words in to reassure people. The Chronicle is a college publication and that guarantees its press freedoms." Chronicle Editor in Chief Shauna Bona fears the Supreme Court decision may allow censors too much room to operate. "Administrators have always tip-toaround the censorship issue," Bona said. "Now they won't have to walk so softly. "The implication is that public schools which fund publications have a right to exercise control over those publications. This clearly affects the Chronicle." Bona said the changes Gabler and Amiot have proposed show good intentions, but only make explicit what implicitly occurs on the Publications Council. "If I were in high school how, I'd be absolutely fearful,"" Bona said. "This is a dangerous lesson to teach any journalism students, whether, they' re 16 or 21." Dave Schmertz, who teaches journalism law at the U., said the decision could affect university publications. "You don't really know until someone tries it out," Schmertz said. "But there is that potential and that's the danger." ed SUMS 10 NEED am Phi Gamma Delta Phi Sigma Kappa Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Nu Theta Pi Phi Delta Theta Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Chi disagrees. publisher Publications of the Chronicle and Quarterly West. Gabler and Amiot's, proposal would make certain that all subsequent Chronicle editors in chief would be selected from returning staff members. The changes would also remove "vague" areas in current Publications Council policies. "There's nothing that really indicates that they can come in and censor a newspaper, but there are ambiguities and innuendoes," Amiot said. "And they can justify prior censorship, or any type of censorship, just by the unclearness of these regulations." "Vagueness is not a wise thing to allow into policy and procedure guidelines," Gabler said. "There should be no an misunderstanding, so if there is and be can it justified unpopular decision, can be fully expected." 1 Beta "can justify censorship." The official Council is the Union 0 too vague, as somehow suggesting control while managing to avoid calling such control "censorship." Publications Council Chair Roy Gibson, who helped draft the original guidelines, . from page one form of the amended have prepare an Policies Council university's Publications and o88 mm Sigma Phi Epsilon Every Student is Eligible for Some Type of Financial Aid Regardless of Grades or Parental Income. University of Utah Blood Donor Program have a data bank of over 200,000 listings of scholarships, fellowships, grants, and loans, representing over $10 billion in private sector funding. Many scholarships are given to students based on their academic interests, career plans, family heritage and place of residence. There's money available for students who have been newspaper car. . . etc. riers, grocery clerks, cheerleaders, We 1 non-smoke- Results GUARANTEED. For A CALL ANYTIME mJ Free Brochure I 18004585830Qg MASHr The best military comedy since TIME MAGAZINE, I Richard Schiekel In 1965, military D.J. Adrian Cronauer was sent to Vietnam to build morale. His strategy: keep 'em laughing. His problem: staying out of trouble. The wrong man. In the wrong place. At the right time. ROBIN WILLIAM Get hooked on giving and you'll receive a FREE Movie Ticke- t- Discount Ski Tickets at Brighton -- or you can enjoy a meal on the Uof (J Food Service. FREE BLOOD DRIVE TODAY! January 14th Ballif Hall Lounge Sponsored by Residential A Living 9 am- - 3 pm JANUARY IS NATIONAL BLOOD TOUCHSTO PICTURES BARRY LEVINSON FILM SILVER ;; ;? R ma ui muvmjn RCSTNlCTEO 1 1 u ;:. mam SCREEN PARTNERS t)UH NSON CC DONOR MONTH! UNIVERSITY OF UTAH BLOOD DONOR PROGRAM Call 581-268- 6 for information STARTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 15 z LARRY III . ROLLINS. MORRA,BREZNER: BREZNER BARRY 6 LEVINSON IDI'IIIMOM. I'll II Kl s AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU |