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Show Page 2 The Thunderbird Monday October 7, 1985 Parking permit needed S.U.S.C. Snack Bar BY TODD ROBINSON (Wendys place.) - 4:0C p.m. Monday thru Friday Hours: 8:30 a.m. . Early Fall Quarter Specials Coffee 454 32 oz. Drink 55c We refill any cup for 354 Hard Ice Cream Cone...254 Quarter Pound Hamburger.. 95 4 NEW ITEM! Breakfast Special 8:30 to 10:30 Ham, Eggs, Hash Browns, & Toast Starting at $1.25 hr l This year, as in years past, SUSC students, staff and faculty are required to display validated parking permits on vehicles which occupy college parking stalls. The permits are used for traffic control, explained SUSC Security Chief Kent Hoyt. As the number of student drivers increases, the parking and traffic around SUSC becomes more congested, he said. Therefore, a strict program must be maintained and student cooperation is very much appreciated, Hoyt said The permits are not issued for the purpose of making money, he added. Any profits are fed back into the program and at $6 a year, just $2 per quarter, they are by far the cheapest parking permits in the state, Hoyt said. He added that $6 is cheaper than the $10 a student pays for parking without the permit. Student who wish to obtain a permit should go to the cashiers office located on the second floor of the Administration Building. Upon paying the cashier the required fee students receive a stamped card which can be exchanged for a validated parking permit at the security office, located in the Plant Operations Building. The permit is to be placed in the lower left hand corner of the cars rear window. Special cooperation and courtesy is requested of students and faculty on behalf of the handicapped, Hoyt said. Five handicapped parking stalls are located in campus parking areas. Special permits for handicapped parking are available in the security office, he said. Any vehicle without the proper decal that is occupying a stall reserved for handicapped parking will be fined $5. If the ticket is not paid within 24 hours an' additional $2 will be added to the fine. Any commercial vehicle using handicapped stalls as loading or unloading zones will be towed away, Hoyt said. Students driving motorcycles do not need parking permits but must park in designated areas, he said. Observatory sets schedule The Monday evening SUSC Ashcroft Observatory programs have begun for fall quarter. objects Viewing sessions in October will include various deep-sk- y and the planet Jupiter on the first two Mondays, and the moon on the second two Mondays. Different programs are scheduled throughout the year, SUSC physics instructor Brent Sorensen said. Sorensen is also the observatory director. Since 1986 is the year that Halley's comet passes near the earth, a great deal of observatory programming will be about it. The best viewing of the comet will be in early March, but Sorensen has already photographed it through the SUSC telescope. Right now it looks like a star, but we know that it is the comet because we can track its movement across the sky, Sorensen says. He has photographed the comet in the early morning hours, but notes that it will be visible in the evenings when its closest to earth. The comet is still at a magnitude, or brightness, of 12 or 13, he said. We can see stars down to the 6th magnitude with the naked eye, so its still about 250 times too dim for us to see. The Monday evening programs are free to the public. Special showings can be arranged on Wednesdays and Thursdays at a cost of $10, according to Sorensen. Cloward chosen for board McRay Cloward, a professor of psychology at SUSC, is a new appointee to the State Child Daycare Advisory Board. The faculty member has served two years of a four-yea- r term as a member of the State Board of Family Services, and its as a . r representative of that organization that he will serve the child-daboard. the on care appointment Major responsibilities of the board are the monitoring, upgrading and licensing of daycare centers. Utah wants to help its residents Cloward says, and in order to do that, toward the state helps with daycare services for those who cant afford it. two-yea- y This $io onr certificate TO. KIS1-HOU- R is w ortn 00 off i r the next roll cf 126 1,35 or disc film y.,i nr ng to us Our PHOTO PROCESSOR give you picture perfect grin's m 'ust 60 minutes1 O'fer expires 0 r 3035 Only onr ceuoon per purchase will 518 S Mam HRS 9 30-- 30 Mon Fn 12-- Sal PHOTO 1 |