|
Southern
Utah University, located in Iron County in the southwestern
portion of the state at Cedar City, Utah, is a fully accredited,
state supported, comprehensive, four-year university.
Established in 1897 as a branch normal school by the state
legislature, SUU has a history unique in the annals of
American higher education. The entire population of Cedar
City engaged in building Old Main, the first building
on campus. The project was begun in mid-winter as men
began hauling logs from Cedar Mountain to the campus.
Men and women donated materials, money, and labor toward
the completion of the building in order that the fledgling
institution could meet the construction deadline imposed
by the state.
In
1913 the school was changed to a branch of Utah State
Agricultural College at Logan, Utah, and became known
as Branch Agricultural College (BAC). In 1953 the name
was changed to College of Southern Utah (CSU), and in
1971 it was changed again to Southern Utah State College
(SUSC). In 1965 the state legislature approved a measure
to transform the institution from a junior college to
a four-year college consisting of four schools: Arts and
Letters; Business, Technology and Communication; Education;
and Science. The four schools of the college are divided
into thirteen departments plus a Division of Continuing
Education. It was granted university status in 1992, becoming
Southern Utah University.
SUU
grants Associate of Applied Science degrees in vocational-technical
and agricultural fields, including cooperative nursing
education in conjunction with Weber State College. The
institution also offers limited graduate degrees, including
a Master of Professional Accountancy as well as a cooperative
Master of Education program in conjunction with Utah State
University. The student body, numbering more than 3,500,
comes from all corners of the nation and more than a dozen
foreign countries. More than 400 faculty and staff serve
the undergraduate and graduate students.
The
campus is located on 112 acres in the center of Cedar
City. Its twenty-five buildings range from ivy-covered
Old Main (1898) and the Braithwaite Liberal Arts Center
(1899) to the Centrum, a special events center and classroom
building, completed in 1987. The men's and women's basketball
teams compete as NCAA Division I independents. The college
football team plays in the Western Football Conference
at NCAA Division II level. The school also has women's
softball, a gymnastics team, co-ed rifle squad, and men's
and women's track and cross-country programs.
In
addition to the central campus, the college owns and operates
a 1,000-acre farm in western Cedar Valley and a 3,700-acre
ranch in Cedar Canyon. The campus is located in close
proximity to Zion National Park, Cedar Breaks National
Monument, and the Brian Head ski resort. The internationally
acclaimed Utah Shakespearean Festival is presented each
summer; and the Braithwaite Fine Arts Gallery, the American
Folk Ballet, Southern Utah University Press, Ashcroft
Observatory, and a museum of natural history are important
components of SUU. The completion in the summer of 1989
of the spectacular Randall Jones Memorial Theatre added
another important cultural attraction to the college.
SUU
prides itself on its broad-based effort to provide high
quality instruction and to culturally enrich students
and the community. A low faculty-student ratio (1:22)
aids in the university's endeavor to distinguish itself
as an institution devoted to excellence.
A
ten-member institutional council implements policies assigned
by the Utah State Board of Regents, including the appointment
of personnel and the enactment of rules and governing
regulations. The college is administered by a president,
a president's council, the dean's council, the faculty
senate, and the faculty.
Wayne
K. Hinton
|