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Show -- 1 Monday, January 7, The Daily Utah Chronicle - Page Two DIG Saddam says get ready for long war Saddam Hussein told Iraqis on Sunday to prepare for war against the "tyranny represented by the United States," and he again ruled out an unconditional withdrawal from Kuwait In a national television address three days before the first direct U.S.-Iratalks, Saddam again linked any pullout to an Israeli withdrawal from the occupied territories a stand Washington has repeatedly a long qi rejected. In Washington, Secretary of State James A. Baker HI repeated that stand, saying: "We will not agree to anything that would constitute linkage." Baker also said that after his scheduled talks Wednesday with Iraqi Foreign Minister Tariq Aziz in Geneva, "I am closing the door" to further meetings. Thatcher heads LONDON group anti-federalis- m Former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher has agreed to become the first president of a bipartisan group of British lawmakers opposed to a federal Europe, press reports said Sunday. 1991 The organization is known as the Bruges Group, after the Belgian city where Mrs. Thatcher, in a speech on Sept. 20, 1988, expressed her opposition to full political union in Europe. package finds Dad in desert 'Any-soldie- r' of brownies was extra Saudi Arabia when he found that the "to any soldier" letter in his package was written by his daughter. The letter by Lomas' daughter, Cetericka, a fifth-grad- e student at Windsor Forest Elementary, was one of thousands written by Ghatam County school children addressed "to any soldier." The letter, which Lomas mailed back to his wife, read: "Dear soldier, Hey, my name is Cetericka Lomas. I am 10 years old, and I know you're hot over there. Well, hopefully you can get home soon. Now we are studying Indians in Social Studies and studying plants in Science. Do you work hard? How high is the temperature over there? Well, we'll talk to you later. SAVANNAH, Ga The gift sweet for Sgt. Rory Lomas in 10-year-- Your friend, Cetericka Nicole Lomas." Events WE SERVE PIZZA BY THE SLICE TO "HJ" January PSYCHOLOGY 305 MBH. 7 SEMINAR-noo- n, "Implicit Memory Research and its Implication for Education DanJ. Woltz. 8 SEMINAR January CHEMISTRY SEMINAR 2006 HEB. 4 Antibiotics" Anandan Palani, U. graduate student p.m., PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM-p.m., 334 OSH. "Macrocyclic Ligands: Strategies for Obtaining Metal Ion Recognition"' Leonard Lindoy, January 9 SURGERY GRAND ROUNDS LECTURE 7:30 a.m., Classroom SERVING PIZZA BY THE SLICE MONDAY FRIDAY & -- THURSDAY SATURDAY LUNCH 11 A.M. - LUNCH 11 A.M. - 5 P.M. LATE NIGHT 10 P.M. -- LATE NIGHT 1A.M. SUNDAY 5 P.M. 11 P.M. 11 A.M. -- -- crowded very good classes are needed to accommodate College of Social and Behavioral Sciences is conferring more bachelor's degrees than many other colleges on campus. The college graduated 927 during 1989-9while the College of Science professors 188 students with bachelor's degrees and the College of Engineering conferred 226 degrees during the same period. About 30 percent of the bachelor's degrees awarded to each graduating class are from the College of Social and Behavioral Science. That is more teach sociology courses part-tim- e women's studies courses part-tim- Resolution... get that car fixed! and Filter Changs Full the PIE AUTO BRAKE AUTOMOTIVE Brake Service State Inspsctfct $5.00 849.95 State Inspection Station No. 2374 additional discount with any "U" ID and this ad makes All models domestic and foreign cars, trucks, trailers, 4x4s, heavy equipment motor homes & R.V.s with complete automotive service including: All $59.95 1S&Sgg2l ft. quarts oi., includes new brake shoes (installed) and resurfacing ot drums (most cars) 10 Disc Brakes I Ero Brakes pizzeria and e. Sharing a professor with another department allows each department to add an instructor by pooling their resources, he said. "This solution is bred of necessity. We're at the point where it's about the than any other college at the U., New Year's part-tim- e. Edward Kick, chair of the sociology department, said there are plans to hire a professor next year who will graduated (maximum SH193 full-tim- 0 with EAST 200 SOUTH (DOWNSTAIRS) class the students. In addition to carrying a higher load of U. students in its classes, the FREE Oil 1 320 shortages and overflowing classes, class quality is still good because of the effort of the professors, she said. Good quality classes require good quality professors, "which we have. Over the past few years, we have provided raises for professors in order to keep them at the college." These raises have been given at the expense of other necessities like paper supplies, Gelfand said. Although there are no plans to hire e new professors to ease the overcrowded classrooms, some departments are devising ways to hire departments teach extra classes without pay because they feel the 5 P.M. Warshel, Gelfand said. Despite the difficulties of professor evaluations in most departments." Gelfand said professors in some 3 A.M. Arieh Work" receive 3 "Morality and Partiality" Susan Wolf, Johns Hopkins University. CHEMISTRY SEMINAR 4 p.m., 2004 Eyring Building. "How Do Enzymes Really James Cook University, from page one 11 "Synthetic and Mechanistic Studies of Bicycloenediyne University. brakes, tune-upclutches, general engine repair, front ends, springsshocksstruts, CV joints, air conditioning, exhaust, state inspections. VISA and MasterCard accepted. 6905 S. State Midvale Hours:MF8B, Sat 8-- 4 566-611- 5 4 p.m 316 SKH. "New Inhibitors of HIV Protease and Peptidyle Propyl Isomerase" Daniel H. Rich, University of Wisconsin, Madison. BIOLOGY 10 CHEMISTRY SEMINAR a.m., 2006 Eyring Building. 11 Peter Pederson, Johns Hopkins "We SEMINAR University of Sydney, Australia. C SOM. DURING LUNCH AND LATE NIGHT Hunt, University of California, "Pleistocene Colonization of Melanesia" Peter White, Nature?" January University of Southern California. MEDICINAL ; CHEMISTRY San Francisco, COLLOANTHROPOLOGY ST. 2:15 216 QUIUM p.m NATURAL HISTORY LECTURE-7:3- 0 p.m., East High. "The End of CHEMISTRY a.m., 2006 HEB. "Fundamentals of Wound Healing and Wound Infections" Tom SEMINAR4:10 p.m 212 S BIOL "Parasites, Male Ornaments, and Female Choice in Red Jungle Fowl" Marlene Zuk, University of California, Riverside. January 11 ANTHROPOLOGY COLL- OQUIUM:! 5 p.m., Stewart Building 216. "Pompeiis of the Pacific" Robin Torrence, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia. MEMORIAL SERVICE- -3 p.m., College of Nursing Building, Room 205. only thing we can consider," since there are not enough funds for the department to add a full-tim- e professor, he explained. Also, because of the increased number of students and the shortage of professors, teachers' assistants are becoming responsible for many lower division courses, Gelfand said. "Upper division courses are becoming crowded, so professors teaching them have less time for lower division courses." The college has tried to accommodate the growing number of students by increasing class sizes, she said. But the large size of the classes causes problems. "Some faculty members say it is increasingly difficult to give written assignments," she said, because there are so many students in the class, grading the assignments is difficult. "The overcrowding is a serious situation," Kick said. "Some junior and senior classes have 90 students in them. The fact is when the classes are this overcrowded, professors simply cannot deliver very much individual attention to each student." Another problem with large numbers of students in the classroom is that "students feel they are only another social security number. Large classes make students feel they have no identity in the classroom and that makes them feel alienated, and that jeopardizes learning," he said. The departments of sociology and political science are particularly crowded. Besides of a shortage of faculty members, there is a shortage of classroom space, Gelfand said. In the mornings, most classrooms on campus are in use. To control overcrowding, "we are now setting very strict controls on classroom size, which is very frustrating to students," she said. "I have heard of some students who wait years to get into certain classes. But we have no choice, we can't grow any more." "We would like to accept every student who qualifies into our college," but because of lack of funding cuts have to be made, Gelfand said. |