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On
20 February 1937 the College of Eastern Utah (CEU) in
Price was established by the Utah Legislature. The local
newspaper described the event as "one of the most important
educational advancements in the history of eastern Utah."
CEU was the first college in Utah created as a state-supported
two-year institution.
During
the first week of October 1938 about 100 students enrolled
in the first classes offered at what was then called Carbon
College. The first president of the college was Elden
B. Sessions. The mission of the new college was to prepare
students for upper-division courses at universities or
to prepare them for a specific vocation.
The
college grew slowly until World War II. As that war started,
vocational programs grew dramatically as the government
sent students to be trained. By 1943, however, those needs
had been filled, young men were in the military services,
and there were only twenty-seven full-time college students
on campus. That situation changed quickly with the end
of the war, and enrollment soon reached about 200.
In
1953 Carbon College was almost closed as a budget-cutting
measure by Governor J. Bracken Lee. The legislature agreed
to the action, but the citizens of southeastern Utah were
outraged and almost immediately a campaign was started
to save the college through a referendum on the legislature's
action. The results of the referendum in November 1954
were overwhelmingly in favor of saving the college.
In
1959 Carbon College became a branch of the University
of Utah. It was concluded that the focus of the college
had been too narrow and that a regional mission and name
were required. The name College of Eastern Utah was soon
adopted and recruiting programs were started in many communities
throughout the region. Students from other parts of the
state were also recruited, and by the early 1960s 400
full-time students were attending CEU. However, these
early efforts were not sustained and it would be many
years before the regional mission of the College of Eastern
Utah would again be pursued.
An
impressive building program was carried out during the
1960s. Five buildings were constructed within a four-year
period and a major campus landscaping program was concluded
soon afterward. There was also a heightened commitment
to excellence of instruction that led to a sabbatical
leave program for faculty members and significant achievements
and success by CEU graduates.
The
Higher Education Act of 1969 eliminated the branch relationship
of CEU to the University of Utah and established the State
Board of Regents as the governing body of CEU and its
eight sister colleges and universities. The regents believed
that CEU must assume the mission and goals of a community
college and that the community to be served was all of
southeastern Utah. One result was the establishment of
the CEU San Juan Center. It began with forty students,
two staff members, and borrowed facilities; yet it now
provides educational opportunities to about 350 students
each quarter from a campus at Blanding which employs about
forty full-time staff members.
Vocational-technical
programs have always been important at the college. A
new Career Center was built in 1975 to house most of those
programs. CEU was given the exclusive role assignment
to provide mine safety training throughout the state;
also, a one-year Licensed Practical Nursing program was
established in the 1970s and the college program now includes
a two-year Registered Nursing degree.
The
physical plant at the Price campus was expanded during
the early 1980s with the addition of art and athletic
centers. A partial renovation of the old vocational building
was also undertaken to convert it into a student activity
center.
CEU
continues to expand higher educational opportunities throughout
southeastern Utah. The programs at the San Juan Center
have been increased and many classes are offered in Grand
County. During the past several years, enrollment has
increased more rapidly than at any time in the history
of CEU. About 2,000 students are typically enrolled each
quarter in classes being taught throughout the four counties.
More students are coming to the Price campus from other
areas of the state, and from other states and foreign
countries, as well, making the college a vital and dynamic
part of Utah's educational scene.
Michael
Peterson
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