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Show I W mm ftft :r'f ?f-: :mp. : .. mm 7 &4 f:l';rtii' : '' , ""'"'"j : ; Mijiiiiii i;'irv. QfpL "f" -j2 x iHf 111'; ; ;! l!j!!!fi:i;!P I " ''' !f' y ' STUDENT PROJECT. SUSC Art Guild students renovate art studio. SUSC Students dispel image of rioters College students are often viewed by tlip public as being be-ing unnwashed rioters and by their professors as being lazy ond Indifferent. Members of the Southern Utah State Col-lege's Col-lege's Art Guild disproved both stereotypes this week when they decided to paint the walls of their classroom and studio as well as their ea nvass.es. Members of the Art Guild turned out in force Saturday and transformed the walls from a cracked and pealin? pinkish-red to a beautiful, light, and airy white. When the student artists learned that the needed renovation ren-ovation of their building was being delayed because of a perrenially innsufficient budget, bud-get, they decided to take over the campus building and do something constructive. Professor Thomas A. Leek, Chairman of the SUSC Art Department, De-partment, expressed the gratitude grat-itude of the art faculty for the work of the students. It was felt that the work of these students is far more typical than that of the rioters and militants whose activities are regularly exposed in the news media. Administrative officers of the college also expressed their gratitude. "These students stu-dents make all of us more determined than ever to do our job well," said Merrill Kunz, controller of the Physical Phy-sical Plant in commentinng on the project. President Roy-den Roy-den C. Braithwaite also thanked thank-ed the students and pledged to report their activities to the Institutional Council, to the Board of Higher Education, and to the members of Utah State Legislature now meeting in the first annual budget session. "All of these people need to be reminded of th-e dependability and good judge-mnt judge-mnt of th majority of students," stu-dents," he concluded. |