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Show Tfie Tfumderbird Wednesday, January 4, 1984 Page 5 Magazine to be published in conjunction with class y , From the initial story and layout ideas to the final Commissioner cites ranch confusion printing, SUSC students will have the opportunity to participate in the creation of a' 36-pa- magazine. As the major project for Communications 204, Editing and Publishing class and lab instructed by Larry Baker, students will learn techniques of magazine design and publication. Baker will function as the magazines executive editor with several student editors to help make decisions. However, he emphasized that although he will be helping, the students will be doing most of the work. Several students have already submitted stories for the magazine, but we will be taking submissions from the student body, faculty and staff and the community. The editors will decide which submissions will be printed in the magazine, Baker said. Some of the stories already submitted are a personality profile on C. David Nyman, a story on Valerie Cohen and a feature on President Gerald R. Sherratt. Submissions needed for the project consist of n illustrations, photos, stories, essays and features. There will be three major sources to finance the 5,000 copies that will cost just under $4,000, the foremost being non-fictio- advertisements. Money will also be contributed through The Thunderbird, which is associated with the magazine. Student recruitment and public relations funds will also contribute by financing the 3,000 copies to be circulated off campus. Baker said that the reasons for publishing this magazine are to provide something other than a newspaper for people to read. It will also give students the experience of publishing a magazine, something that has never been done at SUSC. This is not a writing class, said Baker who explained that emphasis will be on the technical aspects of this type of publication. Distribution of the magazine, which, with the exception of the cover, will be printed in the librarys Media Center, will take place the first or second week in spring quarter. To the editor: In the Dec. 5, 1983, Trading Places" column written by Steve Yates, there are three references to the Woods Ranch recreation area; each reference either implied or stated that Woods Ranch would be involved in a land trade affecting a proposed ski resort in Cedar Canyon. The references: Clear the way means to bulldoze the pavilion at Woods Ranch... The land trade involves 920 acres of college-owne- d land, which will indeed include the picnic pavilion... "... but what about those individuals who enjoy Woods Ranch as a picnic area? In order to prevent any unnecessary confusion regarding Woods Ranch and the proposed ski resort, it needs to be clearly understood that 1) the Woods Ranch recreation area is owned by Iron County, not by SUSC, 2) there have been no proposals by any Cedar Canyon private developers regarding the Woods Ranch recreation area, and 3) Iron County has absolutely no plans to destroy, curtain, or inhibit picnicking activity at Woods Ranch. James C. Robin son Iron County Board of Commissioners Council seats members The colleges Institutional Council has three new members. Elementary school teacher Carolyn Washburn, Monroe, businessmen Sam E. Allen, Panguitch, and Donniel Horlacher, Logan, comprize the trio. They are replacing Loretta Cline, Salt Lake City, Clarence Miller and Frank J. Petty, Cedar City. Cline, a member of the SUSC council when it was established in 1969, served a total of 14 years on the governing body. Miller served four years, and Petty, appointed in 1977, was released from his duties as council chairman to accept an appointment of the Utah Board of Regents. Members of the SUSC Institutional Council meet 10 times each year to review major financial transactions as well as academic, administrative, and curricular policies of the institution. Council members are appointed by the governor to four-yea- terms. r Dale Zabriskie, Salt Lake City, the council chairman. Other members include Vice Chairman James Hoyle, Cedar City, Joanna Adamson, Salt Lake City; Gam Huskinson, St. George; Michael Park, Cedar City; and Mark Wade, SUSC student body president. 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