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Show STUDENTS DISH OUT FREE BUSINESS ADVICE SUs Center for Free BYUS OVERFLOW MAY FLOOD SUSCS CAMPUS. BYU is now limiting its enrollment and is referring students it doesnt accept to other Utah colleges, including Southern Utah State. Enterprise Studies matches students with small businesses, where students consult with and advise their clients free. SEE PAGE 3. 84TH YEAR; NUMBER 52 SOUTHERN UTAH STATE COLLEGE SEE PAGE 2. CEDAR CITY, UTAH MONDAY, MAY 3, 1990 Fee hike is passed OK $13 increase for womens sports, Phase II Regents BY WARD COOMBS In a unanimous vote Friday, the Board of Regents passed a $13 fee increase for SUSC students. The fees, which go into effect in fall 1990, will bring the colleges athletic program into compliance with Title IX regulations and provide funding for Phase II of the Student Center. Of the increase, $3 is earmarked for compliance with Title IX. According to Michael D. Richards, vice president for college relations, the fee increase will allow the college to meet equality standards set by the NCAA and the federal government. with the regulation would jeopardize SUSCs federal financial aid status. The NCAA has outlined a three-yea- r compliance plan for SUSC, and SU has nearly completed first-yea- r Title IX requirements by making coaching changes and improvements in athletic programs. Provisions to be met in the second year are directed toward making changes and adjustments in the athletic operating budget; the third years compliance efforts will be tailored toward improving academic counseling and support programs. The remaining $10 of the fee increase will be placed in a fund for the planning and construction of Phase II of the Student Center. Sterling R. Church, vice president for student services, said that the fee increase was needed to show student body commitment to the future of SUSC. ASSUSC President Julie Stuart, who presented and promoted the $10 increase, said that she was elated that the Board passed the increase. Stuart said, The Board of Regents are very (CONTINUED ON PAGE 6) Rosie Lovell, left, works with self defense instructor Phyllis Taylor in learning the finer points of defending herself against attackers. This course is only one of several offered through SUSCs Turning Point program for single parents, displaced homemakers, and financially needy families. Other courses include job interview skills and assertiveness training. |