I U. of Utah athletic officials took down this billboard In response to cnarges tney usee 10 sen ► Gymnastics on a whole new apparatus II tit ket sale' I>>i the ^ttm.t'.m -s team at the t of l tall wete lagging Ircloie, the\ deliiutrls at el it m* \ billboard along the bights.t\ leading to Salt 1 ake ( u\. home of the iinivrtsitv, leatnieil vipliomoir gam nasi \iinre liepanict hi uhat wmie lalleil .1 m iimliI I tali athletic officials vis they eteited the hilllmaid simply to promote tit ket sales for the team \nd tlies irrtamlv smteetled last veal the gvtnnav til s team sold 1 ‘J.'iOtt tii kels during a livemeet (k iiikI (tilling a three meet period this season, the tram alieath hat sold IS,300 lit krls 'I loved it," savs I 1/ Abel, ditretor ot Sports Information at the uniseisits "I thought it was great 1 he billboard is down nos. though, removed amid 1 harges the universitv used se\ to promote lit ket viles “It was girat lift* public its to Mat! out with ami thru K woftivt a nmvim r, Mm I \a\s )< nmtrf < »or a 1 ol \ tali st'iuoi vivs thr billtMiard Weilt too fat pot l«> sell ti‘ krts “It in a gymuatlit > }«»•*/ , but I think. iiuivIk* .i difletrtit Ih tv would have Iktd bettrt. she va\s I hough thr athletic ollit laU bin kled m tin- did to public pirvsuir, gynmaMlc s I oachturg Maivlrn %avs I rrpaiuri \ jwitoi mam r has not suf In rd lio auv of the billUmrd conn ovrr»\ and nrithri ha* the tram s "In Litt a\ a group wr found thr whole thing anno mg, Maivdrn sun* “What wr thought was a Ix auulul, armtic , r>r c atching irpirsrntalmn wrwrir abvtlutrlv suipiisc c! when people i hov to make some thing oi it * ■ Bohhir Kri/, SDSl' ( ollr%tan. South Dakota Stair l . ► Insanely great profit for a frosh tmanual aid" S< holaiships' Mom and Dad' Who nerds ’em' Adam Sirin certain!* tionn i now that hr owns his ow n company Hrn iH-yrar-old l of Pennsylvania hrshman siim k oni on his own toipn.Ur vrn lures. Hr now owns a company, insanrh (deal Soliwarr Ca» . VS}kit It helps pa\ l«»i Ills St bool ing — quintessential collrgiair lx m »tsti ap financing. Freshman Adam Stein's computer skills translate Into big bucks. g “I guc*( New York. < ollegr at Oneonta. but lull didn't just mean v«u wt-rr part ol minuritv group. It also meant von wrtr a ttnpct t in a l«x al assault. | jri( Hattmatk. vice president lot administration approved the release ol a list ■*! all War k malt- student* enrolled in tire col lege to the Oirronta and New York State Polite aim ottiiei* found blood Mamed towel* on campus following an assault in the i ommunitv Now lawyer* lot War k Mitdent* at tire *t liool aje miio« and ask my the Mate to provide *cholat*hip* a* pact ol * otn|>ens»iioii lot the 'War kltM." Polti r sav the* requested the lot front the umvristly to assist tit an mveMigation of an rarh mommy burglary and assault of a 77 vear-old woman in September I he victim reported that when a Mat k man came into her home in Oneonta the* were troth ml (tunny tire confrontation IU.it k male student* at (htronta are outraged then rumeixity vice president released then name* a* a block of potential suv prtu in the crime Furthermore, the student* say. the* were Mopped on campus and at their job* l«v l<* al police who insured on checking tlreii wnst* for slash marks, Scott N. Fein, lawyer from tire lirm of Ostemum and Hanna, *ay* the lawsuit will la- fried in both Mate and federal courts. Ihr sun focuses on violations of the 14th Amendment, which guar antee* due pox es* awl equal pone* tnm of right*. 'What was done at Oneonta In colleye and state officials r» a hlaunt at t til ra* rsm." say* Kevin Allen, an Oneonta student cm lire •blacklist.’ About 10 percent of SI'NY at Oneonta college’s tr.200 *m dent* ate minorities I {art mat k ha» refused to comment on the c ase He was suv pended witlrout pay for a month after tire tin idem Alan B Donovan, college president. *av* Hattmatk violated the Buckley Amendment, a federal privacy act that prohibit* a m hool from releasing such information to an outskle ayetto Mike HieMr.itid. an attorney at Utr Student Pres* law (enter, say* no part of lire amendment allow* a school to give informa tion about racial Mat out* loan outside agency, Tire amendment was designed to protect the privacy ol students; therefore, per sonal information t annot Ire released wuhtHit tin- consent of the student SdH. pobce deny rac ism was involved in singling out bla< k col lege student* *lf vour car lias an accident ami tlrere’s rerf paint on it. ate you going to look for a green carr says H Kail ( Standler, a senior state polite investigator. ■Julian Willock, The Sp^intm, State U. of New York, Buffalo ► Dirty Dancing They liad die time of their live*. And they may have a police record to prove it, Two 20-year-olds, one a student at Florida State l/.. were arrested for having sex on a dame floor amid more than 100 people in February at a Tallahassee. Fla.. nightclub ‘Tires were completely exposed from the waist down," sard Police Department spokesman Phil Kiracofe. " Hu- guy was quite into what he was doing. He didn't want to be interrupted. * The titan, a first-year student at FSU, prestmiably was too Inisy to notice when two officers walked up behind him and his cohort, a female Tallahassee resident. Neither of die mingler* would comment on die event afterward, but the man told offi cers he had met the woman that night on the dance floor and did not know her name. Kiracofe said the couple's technique was a vertical stance against the wall. After the authorities initiat ed coitus interrupts, Kiracofr said, the two dancers quickly regained their senses and modesty, as they scurried to pull up their pants -|Thc crowd) started cheering, laughing and clap ping.* Kiracofr said. Steve, a bartender at the club, was working when die incident occurred. “A lot of wild things have happened here in the past, but this was dirty dancing to the extreme." he said. The dirty dancers were charged with disorderly conduct and released until their court hearing. »J«tl Riaberg, Florida Flumtwi, Florida State IJ.