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Show Institutional Council Has Six New Members- Hold Meeting on Campus I :. , " , V- '1 , '.iiaiik, Southern Utah State College has to offer its students." "We also express our appreciation for the contributions con-tributions of those members of the council who are leaving us. Their service has been recognized by many, both on the campus and across the state." Institutional council members at each of the state institutions of higher education ed-ucation meet to serve as the "legislative" authority for their respective colleges or universities. Among the more specific duties of institutional councils are to facilitate communication between the institution and the community; com-munity; to assist in planning, plan-ning, implementing and executing . fund-raising and development projects; to perpetuate and strengthen alumni and community identification with the institution's in-stitution's traditions and goals. There will be a majority of "newcomers" when the Southern Utah State College Institutional Council holds its next meeting on campus July 13. Six "new" members have been appointed by Utah Governor Scott M. Matheson and ratified by the State Senate last week. Actually, two of the "new" members are familiar faces: James Hoyle, one of the appointments, is just finishing a one-year term on the council as president of the SUSC Alumni Association; and Don Marchant, who will be taking Hoyle's place as alumni president, is a former for-mer SUSC student body president. Both are living in Cedar City. Other new members of the council include Clarence Miller, retired Cedar City businessman and a former member of the State Building Board; Michael Park, a southern Utah attorney at-torney living in Cedar City; GarnfHuskinson, partner in a southern Utah accounting firm who lives in St. George; and Joanna Adamson, a , former elementary teacher and active ' community worker living in Salt Lake City. Holdover council members mem-bers include Eric Houle, Dugway, 1979-80 SUSC student body president; Frank Petty, Cedar City, Postmaster; Loretta Cline, Salt Lake City, real estate broker; and Dale Zabriskie, Salt Lake City, Public relations executive. Retiring council members are Kumen S. Gardner, Cedar City, who has served as chairman of the group; Aline W. Skaggs, Salt Lake City; Robert R. Sonntag, Salt Lake City; and Lucille G. Taylor, Spanish Fork. Mrs. Taylor's appointment was to run until 1981, but an appointment to the state legislature cut short her term on the council. "We are looking forward to working with the new council members," Orville D. Carnahan, SUSC president, said. "They are top notch people who will be invaluable as we go about maintaining and improving upon the fine things that I "DUST STORM, CIMARRON COUNTY, I OKLA.,1936". The photographs of Arthur Rothstein will I be on exhibit at the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery from J July 11 through August 18. The show has an American I documentary theme and is entitled "My Land- My J People." The gallery is located on the Southern Utah State I College campus. |