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Show The pattern on the oposite page could stand for many things: An ASUU President's notebook; the path of a student trying to find his representative on campus; or the route an executive order has taken on the way to it's final disappearance. At any rate, it symbolizes much of Utah's Student Government- in the past at least. THE END OF THE SANDBOX SET? Not to condemn this year's ASUU as a group President Randy Dryer was hemmed in by Executive Council; and two Boards, Finance and Public Affairs, made definite steps toward realist GOVERNANCE. As a whole, however, ASUU was no more remarkable than in the past. It's best accomplishment was the Contemporary Issues Program; it's main debate was the parking problem. When the new constitution went into in the top spots, and the same soi^Pof ASUU was expected. Enter Grover Thompson. The activist vote split four ways in the Primaries, bumping Thompson out by a small margin. His United We Stand party decided to conduct a write-in campaign. Some of the most honest and diligent voter appeals ever heard qg campus produij^ results-Thorn7 the first bLjt^fcrectt'd to the are alre'ady in the move-next yeai see a different ASUU. |