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Show TTTri f MB The Salt rr tTrrrt t n lake Tribune, At'lion ltriMi"lit I) Sunduv. Januarv W 1'), f (i r t rrTxrTrnHTTrTrP'rnp" I'M r a'liiii"lnii Erual loumlalion Utahn to Defend Bar Association in Suit Challenging Screening ol Judges thtj ; Hy Virginia Huhicheaux Iribune Washington Bureau W ASIIINGTON Kin mer IS So linlor General Hex Lie of I'rovo. l'lah. Thursday ai know lodged be lias been hired by the Ameriean Bar As sociation to defend a lawsuit i lial lengtng ABA's role in screening judges on behalf of the White House However, with Ins Urn-- in the lawsuit. brought by the Washington Legal Koundation, not due until mid February, Mr. Lee now affiliated with the local law first term, however, ai Mr Lee began Ins four-yea- r letniie under fire from liberals Tribune Cruise to Trade Snow for Tahiti Beaches and womens groups who accused hnn of being too conservative To- It will he off to Tahiti and temperatures, white sand beaches and crystalline lagoons Wednesday travelers participating for the 225 Intermountain-arein Tin Suit .uke Tritium eighth annual cruise The 1986 edition ol Tin Tribum - cruise will be a excursion including a three-dastay in the Tahara a Hotel near Papeete. Tahiti's capital, and a 1,200 Expected to Attend January Conventions The Salt I.ake Convention and Visitors Bureau reports .20 visitors unexpected to convene in Salt Lake City dunng January to attend meetings and conventions for 23 groups According to the bureau, each delegate will spend approximately $368. winch will bung in city revenues ol $441,600 and taxes of $43,006 Snowbird will play host to lint here for the Symposium m Advanced Kheumatology, 22 on a Irudential-Bacski trip, a group of 35 from National Semiconductor, and 31 people from Hie Frontier Ski Team The t'mted States Dental Association will attract 25 members to its meeting at the Hadtsson Hotel Friday through Sunday, and 50 people are expected to attend the 96th Arcom conference Saturday through Jan 27 The Western Airlines meeting will draw another 25 people to the hotel The Holiday InnSalt Palace is expecting 30 visitors for the Water Works Equipment Company Conference Monday and Tuesday. 30 from Cuna Insurance Tuesday and Wednesday. 18 people from Ftubber Engineering, and 200 employees from the Varian Corporation Wednesday and Thursday The Hilton will host 125 delegates for the Intermountain Association of Hardware & Implement Dealers convention Thursday. Friday and Saturday. and 25 are expected to attend the National Institute for Safety Research meeting The Airport Hilton will host 20 guests for the I 'tali Society ol Respiratory Therapy meeting Tuesday through Thursday 1 onserva-live- insisted that as the government's top litigator the Utahn had either ignored or not pushed enough for the administration s views on controversial issues such as abortion, school prayer, busing, criminal law and civ il rights This v lew was pushed despite his conservative victories in I Ironu-ally- ch-- i Legal Foundation vents conservative anger over a number of potential nominees for judgeships who have made it through the ABA screening process despite their perceived liberal leanings As he mulls his rebuttal. Mr. Lee Dost story said a U(i,sii)i(fori viliThursday slating he had "been fied in print by conservative scholars or other issues coming before which he kept from coming before -the high court Mr Lee insists almost year later, however, that fie was as gatekeeper when he had of the Supreme Court to learn the necessity of compromise - and still is, "VERY conservative." In the suit against ABA that Mr. Lee will he rebutting, the Washington Ircmiont Reagan's ward the cud of Inin ol Sidlcy and Austin mi a pail said lie wasn't at libertime basis ty" to discuss the hr lei Tin not sine what I will have to say, and would have a genetal reluctance to discuss it at this time any wav." said the lormer dean of tali s Brigham Young ('Diversity La Si bool who i esigned as sidieilm gen eral late last Api il a pre-cruis- e cruise among the French Polynesian islands aboard American Hawaii Cruises newly relubished SS Liberie The Tribune travelers will begin their excursion aboard a chattered Transameriea 747 which will lly them trom Salt Lake City to Tahiti via Los Angeles The traveh is are to cheek in lor their flight at the Key Airlines counter in the main terminal at Salt Lake International Airport The main terminal is the facility seven-dd- The Young Farmers conference at Howard Johnsons is expecting 120 to attend its meetings Thursday through Sunday, and 20 people are expected to attend the J R. Simplot Company meeting Tuesday through Friday The Australian Tourist Commission will have 25 members slaying at the Sheraton Triad Hotel and Towers for its meetings Wednesday and Thursday, while 25 employees of C l Data will attend its conference Sunday through Jan 26 Little America Hotel will host 50 visitors from the 19th Special Force Group Wednesday through Saturday, and 40 eonventioners aie expected for the Wester n Cemetery meeting during the same lime housing United. Frontier. Continental and several other airlines. The Key Airlines counter is in the southeast end of the terminal adjacent to Eastern Airlines During the pre-cruis- e stay in Papeete, members ol the group will be on their own to visit the highlights ol Tahiti. The Tritium and Ameriean Hawaii Cruises will provide a reception for the group in the Tahurra Friday night, and the group will board the Liberte1 Saturday afternoon. The ship will visit the coral atoll ol Rangiroa and the islands Huahme, Raiatea Tahua. Bora Bora and Moorea during the course of the cruise The Tribune sponsors a cruise each year to provide an opportunity for Intermountain-areresidents to travel together with friends and neighbors in an escorted. but informal group arrangement a as insufficiently dedicated to cause" was a bit of an overstatemenl of the controversy swirling arour.J his departure as Solicitor Genera That was a turbulent time when Seix who had suj Orrtn Hatch. ported Mr. Lee at his confirmation hearings on issues such as his view! was one of the few conse on ERA vatives who loyally stuck by him. h - - "But you know how those reported get carried away when they writ things." joked Mr. Lee. w ho insists it a coincidence the ABA hired him to take on his old adversaries at thi Washington Legal Foundation as part of his piesently splitting his time between hete and Provo. He is nut. Mr. Lee said, a "Washing ton lawyer" who came here, gut Poto, mac fever, and can never go back tf or Provo the proverbial Pocatello "I'm moving back to Provo thi? summer," said Mr. Lee, who this fat is to assume a full chair in BYU's !aJ school. "In addition to teaching in the law school. I'll also practice law on I basis, handling cases lik part-timthis one in which I'll defend ABA. I H practice partly here, partly there! - e wherever the takes me." part-tim- e practicj t 3 Sophisticated Levelors off at ZCMI 50 West in Hotel Ctah is expecting 19 members ol the Carbon County School Hoard lor its meeting Thursday through Saturday, and 30 members are expected to attend the Texas Society of CPAs Thursday and Friday In addition, Kenny Rogers will be performing in the Arena at the Salt Palace on Sunday, along with Sawyer Brown and Lee Greenwood Also, there will be a Biomedical Engineering Symposium Monday through Thursday at the Salt Palace. The (.'tali Jazz will play host to the Denver Nuggets on Tuesday, the Milwaukee Bucks on Wednesday, the New Jersey Nets on Thursday, and the Los Angeles Clippers on Saturday at (I p m Also, the Eagles will play host to Milwaukee on Friday and again Saturday at 12 noon at the Salt Palace Returning Students Declining And USU Wants to Know Why LOGAN (AP) Nearly half of Utah State University's 1984 freshman class failed to return to school for another year and administrators want to tind out why Val Christensen, vice president for student service, told the USU Administrative Council last week he also is - concerned that 2,600 people were accepted by the university for the fall quarter's freshman class, but only 1,300 of them enrolled in classes. Humana Promotes Veteran To Executive Post 1 0-Y- ear Special to The Tribune The new associate ex ecutive director at Humana Hospital Davis North here says the major change in hospital ad ministrat ton over the past In vears has been linLAYTON go vern merit's involve- changing ment in the health-- ; care system Floyd Morgan, recently promoted from his hospital position in finance, says the new ted eral policy of reimbursing hospitals a specific amount for each treatment instead of paying submitted costs will continue to reward hospitals that operated and well-maaged "This places the larger hospital chains in a good position." says Mr Morgan "The chains benefit from purchasing power and the in lierent economies of a corporate level A chain, for instance, can maximize the use of legal help by spreading the cost" between munv dil ferent hospitals He said Humana Inc is committed to liitute growth in I t .ill and that Dato oiler vis North is quality ( are at competitive prices Mr Morgan replaced William Hees. w ho accepted a position lor Hu manu m ( Im ago The new associate director has been with tin- host smic it opened in T'TO ' ' whalsula.ss 237-200- 0 He said 49 percent of students who attended USU for the fall quarter of 1984 failed to return for the fall quarter of 1985. compared to the national average of 36 percent. "USl' s rate is higher than we ever wanted (ill to be." he said The council appointed a representative from each department to work with university recruitment. A survey also will he taken of the people who applied at the university hut did not enroll to find out why students chose not to attend school. Christensen said some of the students who failed to return for another year probably chose to serve on missions for the Mormon Church and others may have decided they could not afford another year of school Also, he stud, some of the students may have been turned awav by the new registration system implemented last year Named To UTech Council Y. Graduate Special to The Tribune OREM - Aileen H Clyde. Spnng-ville- , has been named to serve on the Institutional Council at the Utah Technical College at Irovo-Orem- . filling a vacancy left by Bruce Griffin who retired aftet sei ving on the council for two years Mrs Clyde's appointment was announced by Gov Norm Bangerter. A graduate of Brigham Young University with a bachelors in English. Mrs Clyde has been extensively involved in community service, and was employed as an English instructor at BYU for nearly ten years. A chairman of the Trustee Section of the Utah Library Association, she also solved as chairman of the Utah County Council on Ihug Abuse and Itehahilitation the Timpanogos ((immunity Mental Health Center Advisory lioird. the Utah Judicial Council Advisory Committee and the Utah State Commission or Criminal and Ju mile Justice Married to Hal M Clyde, senior vu e pH sulont and construction manager of W W Clyde and Company. Mrs Clyde his si'iwd in various If add Hup posii ions lor the I hul l h ol of Latter-daJesus Ctiri'-Saints Ihev ale the parents of three sons on Verticals A. Save 50 0 IMlIII B. 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