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Show March21, 2000 The Forum - 7 Rue 21 Is looking for a few good employees for flexable Part Time hours and for full time employment. Run my business I'm a professional executive. Seeking a sharp individual to train to help new offices. Flexible schedule, perfect for students. High income potential, (fitness products) ftpt call Intermediate Level Belly Dance Classes with Shahravar and Zahirah-Nexperience necessary! Monday nights 9 p.m. at the Brickyard Athletic Club for Women. Call 2 o 8-- Positions Available In: Factory Stores at Park City, 485-185- for information. UT Factory Stores, Draper, UT Zion Factory Stores, St. George, UT Provo Towne Centre, Provo, UT 293-847- 1. To Apply Call Westminster College Campus Patrol at Crime Log Weekly Crime Log for the week of March 15. The following Incidents were reported to the Westminster College Campus Patrol between March 15. This summary contains most incidents reported to Campus Patrol but does not include Incidents such as: medical shuttles, ambulance transfers, false alarms, general service calls, etc. March 12: Lower Nunemaker: Vechile break in. March 13: Report of suspicious juveniles. Saeed Rezal Director of Patrol and Safety 1840 South 1300 East SLC, UT 84105 Phone: (801) 832-252- 7 Fax: (801)485-198- 9 E-ma- affected her adolescence. il: Sex Law passed the bill 7 and the Senate passed the bill 3 with all but 9 Republicans voting for the 40-2- Continued from Page 1 police find out they are two consenting adults? What do they planning on doing at this point? Many times, people are more apt to do something they have been forbidden to do. Take for example the movie "Footloose" where music and dancing had been banned. The younger people still went out, danced, listened to music, drank and engaged in other "unlawful" activities. Rep. Mary Carlson, Lake City and a former executive of D-S- alt Planned Parenthood was quoted in the Salt Lake Tribune as saying, "Ignorance is never the best policy. It only fosters more ignorance. Abstinence is also a method of birth control that has a very, very high failure rate. It fails because people don't practice it." The House as she grew, her free and often rebellious personality prompted her parents to send her to all girls Catholic boarding school. Connoly does not say much about this experience in her everyday speech, but rather lets her poetry speak for itself. But she does allude in her poetry to the time she was in boarding school, entering into her teen years, and the oppressive climate she felt from the nuns and priests which 16-1- bill. Merkley says, "As residents of Utah, I suppose we had better start building more prisons to hold all the juvenile offenders, and be prepared to accept the jokes from Jay Leno and ridicule of more clear thinking people' Poets Continued from page 1 Larsen was bom and raised in Central Idaho, and his upbringing takes a central aspect in his material. Several other poems deal with his upbringing in the Mormon Church, the experiences he had with his local ward leaders and the overall impression his youth has left on him. But most of all, his memories that provide inspiration for his writing are about the landscape of Idaho. Geraldine Connoly's poetry has similarities to Larsen's. Connoly was raised in Pennsylvania, and Connoly attended the boarding school in the sixties, when the Catholic Church experienced so much upheaval in the wake of the Second Vatican Council. Connoly's poetry deals with four other main ideas: her Catholic upbringing, the experiences of her descendants in their native Poland, narratives on coal mining and coal mining towns and her daily experiences. All of these are combined and expressed in her most recent book. Province of Fire. Connolly has a playful sense of how language works and a keen awareness of where she is, where she has been and where she is going. "True poetry crystallizes," remarked Connolly during her reading. Her poetry has firmly crystallized her Catholic youth, and that poetry boldly and often angrily expresses her past frustrations with it. There is one more reading this year, on Thursday, April 6, featuring poets Joel Long and Craig Arnold. The reading is free to the community and the Jennifer Crawford ext 709 and will be held in Nunemaker Place. degree," explains Todd Hevner, a senior at Westminster College. Fear Continued from page 6 some to wander off because they grew bored or because they were in search of new dreams. Still many stayed seated allowing the professors in each window to provide and share knowledge. The train pushes on even with its loss of passengers, moving through the years. Then something happens, some of the passengers see the end and they try to let the others know but the train gains speed. Everyone strains to see the end and what the future will hold? Fear and excitement churn in the gut of every passenger. Many of the riders try to prepare themselves quickly but ready or not the train will crasn right into the "real world' throwing everyone out of their seats. I hear people chattering about me aoout the fear that is consuming them; maybe they'll go for masters or maybe marriage andor a job. Some of us find ourselves wishing we could crawl back under our parents' wings. Finally, after all of those years, after losing ourselves m the ambition of gaining our degrees we look up and realize it is over and that is a distressing fact to deal . with. "I can't help but fear the unknown just a little, but I am sure that no matter what happens I will always be glad that I attained my Think back to being a freshman, so unaware of the end of this journey; you cannot place your finger on it, out somewhere in time it seems you have found yourself, you are open, your mind is far more capable of accepting new ideas. You realize how much bigger the world seems, with so many possibilities. So, no matter your goals in the beginning fancy cars, big houses, high paying jobs - realize you have already gained something no one else can take away yourself. You have grown into a person that you would nave never been if not for these college years. You have gained everything already. "It doesn't matter what the future brings, I know I am leaving college as a better person, a stronger person, and I already achieved what I came for," remarked Tracy Smiser, a senior at Temple University. So if you fear the future, if you are sad that it is over, realize that we all stand united on that. We can be afraid but it will work out because we already learned to survive. Helen Keller said it best, "When one door of happiness closes another opens but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us."0 I in XT' rs ma D3MC mm, 'Atl :tri |