Show u THE UTAH’ UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY VOL 77 NO 29 LOGAN UTAH MONDAY DECEMBER 3 1979 inflict delays canyon construction Ml M impacts and construction problem road consiruc-Hc- t eostroverxial in Logan Canyon will without Impact State-M- t 1 a proposal by the Utah rtswnt of Transportation is by the Federal Highway arty next summer mEmnronmrnlsl lilmaulritinn 71a proposal calls for mi resurfacing of jowcfcafUS H9 from the widen a b T mile Kight Hand FoAtttht first large curve past U'l Spring Teaatm L'DOT plans mclude mmctinf aeveral i bridge at sdaung those now exist mg akapcst from the canvon walls of the 40 existing curves nvwli f during the thf L'DOT BoU nd th MU agrtt that jLaf aatural sort tarmidabl nnMr ih x fextur iHnimc environmental visual afhs t on the aesthetic of He also mentioned the improvethe canvon ment of the Cowley Canyon and I he longest departure from the Temple Fork roads existing alignment will occur near Development of a park near Kuk s Spring Two ridges will lie Km k Spring hat also tieen mentraversed by using cuts of up to tioned in the past tiv the Forest feet The river will lie bridged and Service No plans for this project crossed are presently tieing considered 1 he Forest Service suggested though it remains an inventoried that the fill could be used as base recreation site material for an improved twe These assoiiated development wheel drive road up Wood Tamp may influence the Forest Service a Hull' w decision to grant the access which M 1 Holier t s Imogen District the ITH(T needs before construcranger of the ('ache-- asaU h Nation can begin tional Forest felt that this The first two phases of construcpossihilit v was unlikelv tion (lietween Logan and Right More feasafile uses according to Hand Fork) were completed Roberts were the creation of to the passage of the National prior Envarious parking kits for hunters vironmental I’oliry Act of 1909 and other recreat lonislx or the The first plan for the third phase placement of large tioulder m Temwas subject to the NEP4 As a ple Fork ti mininue bank erosion "major action involving fuderal and create trout habitat funds an environmental impact statement was required before construction could begin This requirement enabled conservationists to evaluate and stall the class title the bulletin as along with the general construclMin East year the CIH)T tried again Cooperative education is designed as a way for the The plan was reduced in scope and student to gam training m addition to coldesigned to be more sensitive lege credit and payment for the experience toward the environment The committee will time the length of the awarding The project wa given a ceremony and possibly discontinue the awarding of " category III degrees Baccalaureate exercises will classification which allows an encontinue to be a part of L'SU tradition vironmental evaluation to be Possible speakers have been selected for graduasubstituted for the EIS tion Dan Rather Tom Johnson of the Los Angeles (ieorge Bohn division adW Times and T H hite author of Charlotte's Weft for the Eederal ministrator are under consideration Highway Administration said the evaluation will be "less precise" increase One example of this is the curve just before Loan Cave A bridge will be built there placing the road way on the pioit side of the river Kither a large cut will la taken from the eastern wall or the riverbed will be altered and a smaller cut will fie taken A second bridge will then reconnect the road way with the present alignment Another problem spot is the curve at China How where the canyon wall will be cut haik to straighten the road and several trees will lie removed Hv using a steel retaining wail a third passing lane will !e added to the dugway This is the seition of the proped stretch with the most severe vertical drop toward the river The ITKfT admits the retaining wall mav have the greatest listing called ‘inadequate’ Co-o- p education classes could be listed in bulletins by this summer after mv of the new class title policy Initiation on cooperative education waa Academic Senate Thursday evening by Mvtia The thrust of Academic Senate Reaolu-witclass design-changing a tkt arheduled quarterly fiulletins TW naoktlion reads "Many classes are uch titles as independent reading" and workshops seminars field study etc The that classes should fie entered in Um h co-o- co-o- co-o- p co-o- ’non-major- pat-graduat- than the EIS It is this lack of precision com- bined with concern over public involvement expenditures and environmental impacts that has led to he most recent alarm by ksal citizens tOkWil j Inauguration marks ‘change and tradition’ THE CROWD — L'tak State’s Brian Jackson (55 aggressively briniis down n rebound nninat Weber State while Wildcat Steva Condia (42) and Aggie Keith Hood — rrowly°P'n" iPhoh KnrMO bent Weber in neertiaa 91 A4 in 151 Dignitaries from the academic world government and the rcligioua as the community participated in the inauguration of Stanford Caier Con12ih president of Utah Slate Eriday in the Chase Fine Art Center cert Hall Donald B Holbrook chairman of Uuh State Board of Regents the conprefaced the official investiture with brief remarks "Although the and evolved purpose has changed primary of the university cept has been unaltered The purpose is to transmit intelligent principle and seek to truth" Holbrook said The president aaid in his inaugural address that "an inauguration - if onceremony is a formal introduction to an office It signifies change ly a changing of the guard And while an inauguration signifies change the ceremony also reflect tradition and continuity Caier focused on the tradition of higher education referring to Socrates and Plato He stressed the influx of liberal arts into the core curriculum of western universities since the end of the 12th century He congratulated the USU faculty in it willingness to provide "intellectual companionship" with students Research and scholarly activities were also marked as phenomenal "In USU Utah ha a better university than it realizes" he aaid Cazier also stressed the need for a balance between general education and specialization Lester Essig ASUSU president said "As students we look forward to working alongside the president The most positive aspect of Cazier is an open door as well a an open mind We will support him in a positive beneficial way" ofBishop Joseph Lennox Federal from the Salt Lake City Diocese fered the invocation Neal A Maxwell member of the Utah State Board of Regents gave the benediction Dignitaries who were present at the inauguration included Gov Scott M Matheson past USU President and Mrs Daryl Chase Wesley T Maughan president of the faculty association and Donniel lforlacher president of tha alumni association |