Show Utah State University VOL 76 NO 19 UTAH LOGAN WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 8 1978 Presidential search forum draws four students by candidates Bob Presidential sar( h Commiltee and before thn students The went I to ask for for a new St 1 uetdav faculty of their input on the search president Four foreign students were the ody members of rhe student bodv who be held in strut if the ad claiming ministration of another campus where the candidate is employed found out about the interviewing a great deal of problems could arise seclusion the meeting showed up tor hat qualities the designed to learn nd the faculty would like students to see in the new president Approximately 2u faculty snd staff nenders the of "hosid up Members of the ornmiltee announced the deadline tla'e for their fur recommendation poible presidential moved toJan has been ' csmlm IS The members also announced the Board of Regents s shooting for Apnl 1 1979 as a firm appointment date Repreaentativ es from the Af firmativt Action program at Utah State reviewed some of the committee should of pav special attention to to ensure ail andidates ta qual chance to receive the presdential appoint rrient Barbara Gardner president of the Utah American chapter guidelines the poaaibly revise c Association of Professors pointed P’esident Glen University out that when laggart was app- president the ointed umversitv stated it was important the person appointed be a member of the dominate religion in the area guidelines when she made the claim members of the committee disagreed with her However One member of the audience pointed out that people recommended by the search t nmmitiees at all of the campuses in Utah were members of the Mormon Church The subject on how the candidates will be interviewed filled the major part of the meeting Members of the committee said it important the interviews with Registration deadline today Todv is ! hr u pi rt’psUT for inter quarter Registration forms tan picked up and returned in t Ballroom forms should filled out completely auuraii legibly to insure receivi V sired schedules Students w scheduled for lasses in ore 0 cfiss standing gr a i i u Indents seniors sophomores jumo then freshmen Students pre twetve their clas registering st hedules a hdlmg November 20 C lcta in scheduling 'esolved by making ma an "vilatde Registration LnW Pv their do not to pointment of the president Gardner saul she was “delighted the students had a dernocratu chant e to state their opinions Gardner also said the apathy of students as displayed hv the nt forum the is at tendante 'monumental oil for Wm Jantarv 2 the student tdy would like to see in the next university president r-- G It’s a Republican sweep in Cache County by Sheree Joeephann The Republicans swept the Cat he County election last night in an elec lion attracting only 5)4 percent of the 29 25H registered Cache County voter Douglas ftodrero defeated f ar! in the race for ( ache I) Republican Democrat Lemuel County Sheriff K while f arl got 7 607 vote little color to I hi race wa a write-icampaign by the county present heriff Darius Carter Carter ended up winning only 3557 vote The four year eat on the county commission wa won hand down bv Republican Dean H Smith pulled more vote Smith with 10975 than any other candidate in the Icxal races He defeated Democrat Don Drage who received 3557 votes r For the county commission seat it was incumbent Republican T Ray Theurer defeating Democrat Richard Watkins Theurer got 9245 votes and Watkins got 5340 O Wahlstrom Norman Incumbent Republican defeated American party candidate 5H Hay A Thatcher in state House District In District 59 Keith K Jorgenson of the A Republican party handily defeated Mark American the from party Kenning got apAlthough Democrat Gunn McKay s votes and proximately 60 percent of the Utahn won back his position voters in Cache County Richardson put their support behind Jed vole here while Richardson got 50 percent of the Hodrero 5414 pulled Adding a n Ul-minut- e two-vea- McKay got slightly over 40 percent of the Icxal vote American party candidate Roliert T Owens and !enms A DeBoer of the Indepen dent party received minute percentage of the 2200 voles in the Distrs t 24 state senator rate Ha was unopposed In District 4 for the alat schist! board Sam H Gordon barely defeated Jesse A ndarson Voters elected Gordon W Ifawa as board vote member for the legan City School Dcetra t in In District 60 Kvan I Olsen Republican defeated both A Douglas Alien of the precinct 1 He defeated Fail E Miller Demis ratio party and I asm II Savage of the Running unopposed was IyW R 'ooiey who y ac hocl will fill the seat on ilia Cache Coui A mem an parly board In District 6 In Utah s Second Congressional District In other races in Cache County candidates Republlian Dan Marriott easily won Here are the results of those ree lection over challenging University of Utah were unopposed elec (ions law professor Fd Kirmage Seth S Allen Republican was elec ted ou-- y clerk Republican Robert F IHobl McCann was elected county auditor Fleeted as county assessor was lynn Balls Republic an The county res order will be M ic hael E Gleed Republican Iuc lie L Ferguson Republican was elected c William Colby who acted a director of the ( entral Intelligence a Agency from 1973 1976 during in time of unprecedented public secret of the agency vestigations will be the lecturer at operations Convocation Series results of key national races county treasurer F L Republican The Salt Lake City county unification proposal took a beating In one of the closest rate of the mghl Malcom Allred defeated F Neal Mortenson for a seat on the Logan City Schisil Distrirt Hoard in precinct 5 In Schisil District precinct 4 Reed Roliert Durtschi won the Beat defeating Charles I Hyde In other races Miles (Capl Ferry received tee will Colby s lecture subject e of the internment the future Ihur community He will speak e ( ha-sday at 12 30 pm in the Fine Arts Center A firm believer in the need for Colbv today intelligence activity lhe ' " says he is concerned that bv effectiveness could be eroded of too much of the wrong kind publicity "The CIA mav have done which were somethings m the past but it either mistaken or wrong t olby said he CIA is today the best in I telligence serv ice in the worldI It theenvv of foreign nations think we need good intelligence in the world ahead I think we have got It and that it should continue” During Colby s tenure with the (1A Colby combined a deter minalion to protect It clandestine activities with a fielicf that even in a democratic society even the CIA must be accountable under the Const titution In an effort to conteract the widespread mistrust of the CIA Colby testified to Congress and the press about Its aclivites while fight ing to protect its sources Colbv s career has spanned World War II the Cold War V let corrected them itsell I d See page 2 for county attorney Inny Gunnell was elected continue to be a because of the vote Gordon H Hall and I) Frank Wilkins both were voted in as supreme court justic es W inners for the various cemetery cliatra ta In eluded Jess Cook Avon' i Grant Nimmcmda Cornish Raul B Hyde Rark f Uis An derson Millville Nildey Harlow K lnffin Newton Oliver Smith Paradise and J Doris Kskelson Hu hmond will VeNoy C’hristofferaon district judge in District 1 Former CIA director Colby is Convocation speaker Thursday's i Pointrrent with the K 'Ration office FuU fees or a $75 depo mu made hv December "the classes w le pul be “to the registration system a students Another subject of the meeting was if the president would be able to appoint the men directly under him or should they be appointed by the Utah Hoard of Regents 1 he committee did not tome up with an answer but said it should be resear ched The only input any students has was when one asked if a foreigner was secluded for possible appoin The committee said tment evervbodv is eligible for the ap Nam Watergate and the sensational revelations of the Cl A s role in them His earliest experience was parachuting trehinct (cerman lines to work with hrenih ami Nor wegian resistance forces His last experience wa his television defense of the Cl A tiefore Congressional Committees After World War II Colbv a I’rincelon graduate received his law degree from Columbia and practiced for two years with a New York law firm before joining the Ifsrr Kelal lonstxtard staff in W ashing' on I) C Upon the outbreak for the Korean W ar Colbv joined the I I A where with the except am of three years as thief advisr to Ihr National pat ilic at ion program in South Vietnam he remained until 1916 coveit in lie ran the Agency telligence gathering activities and Its secret adit ic al and parcccmlilary ceralion in Sics kholm lloni and Vietnam when 1972 he was named and Executive then promoted in 1973 to Director of I entral intelligence It was while he wa at mg ax that he direc for of the CIA emerge! as a leading figure in American btreign xh v In this he stall am he wa guiding American intelligence In order to estimate future exent and interpret the world ail uai cons to produce from raw intelligence the knowledge that affords the necsin to make wise dec non Director-controlle- I rrmitile I |