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Show THE THUNDERBIRD Students aid businesses (CONTINUED FROM PAGE Vp tv SUSCs Third Annual Patriots Ball Music by Seegmiller Band Thursday evening, 17 May, 1990, 1 P.M. 7-1- LDS Institute An evening of music and dancing in celebration of America and our Constitution Dress: 6.00 a person Blues or Greens 10. a couple with Please RSVP or 586-792- 5 aneanaov Romantic Affordable well-know- Non-tra- d n bow-ti- e semi-form- Scute& Jacuzzi Fireplace Variety of 1 loneymoon Packages Available '0 ask for Brian funds offered 801-586-99- Southern Utah State students applv for are invited to 1990-9- 1 academic scholarships by contacting Support Services. the office of Student A student is generally an older individual who has returned to school, or started college, after an absence from a campus learning situation for several years, said scholarship committee chair Georgia Thompson. The students characteristically e combine academic studies with family responsibilities sometimes single parenthood and full- - and part-tim- e jobs. Applicants for the two scholarships, Thompson said, must be college sophomores attending 12 or more credit hours and with cumulative grade point averages of 3.0 or higher. Scholarship applications are available in Braithwaite Center 201 and will be accepted at the at office through 5 p.m. May 11. The top applicants will be notified shortly thereafter for a committee 1 Town & Country Inns 0 200 N. Main, Cedar City, Utah 84720 586-990- full-tim- I Best i.al interview. VQI5)I PAGE THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1990 The Department of Military Science of Southern Utah State College Cordially Invites you to attend 3) out by the Center for Free Enterprise will be transferred once again to a separate Small Business Development Center. Funding from the SBA will enable SUSC to improve the level of service it offers to businesses, Hiskey said. The Center here is primarily to meet the needs of local small businesses. It gives students an excellent opportunity to see problems involved in business. With the creation of a separate Small Business Development Center, the Center for Free Enterprise studies will be freed to pursue its original goals. The Center began in 1986 with the goal of bringing in politicians as guest lecturers to students and small businesses. However, SUSC was unable to obtain funding to finance its primary goals. Original objectives of the Center called for public free enterprise briefings, a speakers bureau and a research library, but funding limitations thwarted the program. In effect we never did anything; we put it together, talked to politicians about funding but thats it, said former program director Robert A. Moore. While Hiskey agrees that there were past funding problems, he forsees future funding and growth for the Center. I think eventually the Center will play a major role on campus. Well use n that Center to bring speakers to campus and to send students to workshops oriented toward the promotion of free enterprise, he said. SUSC VI o 6 r W Iwsab SUSCS FIRST YEARBOOK OF ANY KIND IN 10 YEARS IS BEING PRODUCED THIS YEAR! Catch the action and savor the memories of this past year (Sporting 0 all ?0D the major events of Life) Production in conjunction with STAB are providing this exciting new concept for the amazingly low price of 920 LCA Video Deposits of $1000 are now being taken in the Student Center for the next two weeks on Wednesday and Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. or call Steve or Brent at 586-399- 2 to reserve your video today Your reservations for a copy must be in before May 21 for duplication purposes. All video tapes will have scrambled signals preventing them from being copied. So sign up now and DONT BE LEFT WITHOUT! 7 |