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Show Page 2 The Tfmnderbvrd Monday, May 14, 1984 Hansen wins agriculture award SUSC student D&ugl as Hansen, a senior in Biological Agriculture, has been awarded the state Vocational Agriculture Excellence Award. Gov. Scott R. Matheson will give Hansen a plaque and a $250 cash prize at a banquet in Salt Lake City today. Hansen won the award, which Douglas Hanse- ' I is sponsored by the State Board of Education, during a competition earlier this month. The Utah college students that competed for the award were judged based on a portfolio each submitted to a panel of judges. The portfolio included a transcript of grades, a resume and a list of school activities each student participated in. The award was also based on their appearance and their knowledge of vocational agriculture during an interview with the judges, Hansen said. This is the first year the award has been offered. Hansen said the focus of vocational agriculture is learning new approaches to agriculture, new ways to breed livestock, better livestock management and improved range practices. A 1979 graduate of Richfield High School, Hansen was a Sterling Scholar, a member of Region IV Governors Vocational Study Team and was recognized as the Most Outstanding and Achieving Senior of his graduating class. Since enrolling at SUSC, the agricultural winner has served as vice president of the SUSC Rodeo Club; as a member of Phi Beta Lambda, a national business club; and two terms as president of the Ag Club. Hansen has earned a two-yecertificate in livestock farm management at SUSC and will graduate in June 1985. He plans a career in agricultural financing, hoping to work in Sevier County with the Production Credit Association (PCA), Federal Land Bank or Farmers Home Administration. I have been interested in Vocational Agriculture as long as I can remember, Hansen says. His experience in the field started when he was a small boy in growing up on a farm-ranc- h Sevier County. ar LDSSA BUDDY DANCE MAY 16th WANT A DATE? DON'T WAIT! For information, contact: Trudy Hansen (0656); Rose Lovell (5253); Jerry Christensen (6277); Sandy Hunt (7298). r 1 i i i i i This Coupon is Good For 2 iyviiiEir FREE SALADS With the Puchase of Any Large Pizza One coupon per p 'za per Any Large Pizza and a Pitcher of Soft Drink-$9.9- 5 The Institutional Council voted Friday to increase the rent at Juniper, Manzanita and Oak residence halls starting next fall. Students living in Juniper or anyone buying a cafeteria meal ticket will also see a price increase ranging from $23 for a ticket to $34 for the ticket. Married students in Oak Hall will pay $135 a month for rent next year, $20 more than they pay now, while the quarterly rate at Manzanita Court will go up $23. For Juniper residents, the increase for room alone is $10. Paul Southwick, vice president for financial affairs, said the increase is mainly just to meet inflation. We try to maintain the budget at a break-eve- n level, he told the council. Southwick said that although the 17 percent rent hike at Oak Hall "is quite a large increase, we feel that the rate there is still quite low. He compared al SUSCs housing costs to other Utah, and the other colleges in r schools all charge more. While Juniper residents with a ticket will pay $1,875 for three quarters, a Weber State student would pay $2,240 for a similar plan, about $100 more than the cost at Utah State. University of Utah four-yea- Housing costs at SUSC vAll still be lowest among four-ye- ar states schook . students pay $2,855, Southwick noted. Vice President for Student Services Sterling Church noted that Oak Hall rent, even with the increase, is still far below that for married student housing elsewhere in Utah. Spanish Trail lecture set for Thursday Convocation AT THE INSTITUTE i Council increases rent for college room, board visit at any Not participating Pizza Hut valid with other coupons or discounts Eatnn or carryout EXPIRES MAY 3 1 Every Tuesday Evening 4 to 9pm. at participating Pizza Hut1 Restaurants Also Available For Carryout i i Dr. C. Gregory Crampton, professor emeritus of history at the University of Utah, will narrate a slide show presentation entitled From Sante Fe to L.A.: The Spanish Trail and the Southwest and explore the values of field study at this weeks Convocation lecture. "It (the show) should be of particular interest to SUSC students and the people of southern Utah because the Spanish Trail went right through Cedar City, notes Lana Johnson, Convocations He was also the associate editor for The American West. Crampton taught history at U of U for 35 years. During that time he directed the universitys Western History Center and the Duke Indian Oral History Project. He retired in 1979. Standing Up Country is available at the SUSC Bookstore, says Johnson. coordinator. Crampton has written more than 30 books, anthropological papers and magazine articles about the gold rushes, pioneer settlement, land development and social history of the Colorado Plateau and the Intermountain West in general. Standing Up Country, the Canyon Lands of Utah and Arizona, won the Best Western Book Award. Student loans are reviewed (continued from page 11:30am-- 1 :30pm only ftwwtnt coupon wNn ocdftng One coupon per person per vtsd between n AM and 4 PM s! pafliaputtno PiiZd Hut restaurants Cash redemption value tL cent Not valid in combmaton with any other Piiza Hut otter Five mmute guarantee applies to our two selections tor orders of five or less per table or three or less per carryout customer j Buy One, Get One Free! WITH THIS COUPON buy one Personal Pan Pizza at the regular price and get a second FREE! L From 1 1 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon thru Sat. EXPIRES MAY 3 1 1) really not realize what their obligations are going to be, Orton said. .5 r'V When students first contract for a loan they are told what their minimum monthly payment will be, he said, but some forget that the monthly payment goes up when students borrow more money. That1 s why it would be very important for students to meet with me at least yearly to review their loans, he said. Orton said that his office does not handle Guaranteed Student Loans, which are processed by individual banks. A different office is also responsible for short-terand emergency loan collections. |