In the News

  • Cache Valley Daily Monday, Sep. 09, 2024

    USU Broadcast Journalism students win Murrow award

    LOGAN - The efforts of a group of 10 Utah State University journalism and communication graduates were recognized recently when they won a national Edward R. Murrow Award for a half-hour program they produced examining Cache Valley’s environmental challenges.

    “Cache Rendezvous: Better Than We Found It” includes in-depth conversations about water, land and air issues in the valley.

    Working in pairs, students were in a JCOM class taught by Brian Champagne and Chris Garff, who said the class culture became one of challenging each other to do better.

  • UPR Friday, Sep. 06, 2024

    USU looks to improve early identification of autism in children

    Utah lags behind the national average of identifying children for autism.

    In an effort to improve the state's standing, the Institute for Disability, Research, Policy and Practice at Utah State University will offer free, remote early identification of autism training for Utah service providers.

    Janel Preston, special educator at the university, said when early identification is missed, children and families are not getting critical services to increase overall quality of life.

    "It is really important for providers, as well as just the general public, to have a better understanding of what autism is," Preston urged. "And how we can help support and increase that awareness, acceptance."

  • KSL Wednesday, Sep. 04, 2024

    Utah State hosts artepaƱo art exhibit rooted in the Latino prison experience

    LOGAN — What began as a form of expression for Latinos caught up in the U.S. prison system is the focus of a new art exhibit at Utah State University.

    "We collect different art and try to highlight stories of people who are generally underrepresented at art museums," said Shaylee Briones, who handles marketing for the museum.

    "Artepaño: Chicano Prisoner Kerchief Art" has been on display since Aug. 4, but a formal opening and program on the exhibit at the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art is scheduled for Saturday from 5-8 p.m. at 650 N. 1100 East in Logan.

  • The Herald Journal Tuesday, Sep. 03, 2024

    USU hosting art therapy event for dementia patients and their caregivers

    USU’s “Museum and Memory” will allow dementia patients and their caregivers to create art and explore their memories,  from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m Friday. at the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art Building.

    The university is hosting the event in conjunction with the museum itself and the Alzheimer's Disease and Dementia Research Center.

    Beth Fauth, the director of the Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia Research Center, says the organization is excited to partner with the museum.

  • The Herald Journal Thursday, Aug. 29, 2024

    USU Day on the Quad connects students and the community

    Utah State University’s annual Day on the Quad went from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday, giving new and returning students a chance to explore ways to get involved on campus and in the community.

    It also provided a respite from the stress of the first week of school.

    Three days into the semester, freshman Trinity Hale said things are going well, just really busy.
    “Seventeen credits is a lot more than I thought it was going to be,” Hale said.

    Hale was exploring the Quad with her friend, Indi Bangerter, a fellow freshman and mechanical engineering student.


     
  • National Geographic Saturday, Aug. 24, 2024

    Wildfire smoke threatens lakes, too. How will it impact Lake Tahoe's future?

    California’s many mountain lakes, which are typically low in nutrients, may be especially vulnerable to large influxes of nutrient-rich ash. “Any addition can mean a doubling or tripling of the amount of nutrients [in mountain lakes], and that can really shift these fragile ecosystems,” says Janice Brahney, an environmental biogeochemist at Utah State University in Logan.

  • Cache Valley Daily Wednesday, Aug. 21, 2024

    Utah State wins new dairy product competition two consecutive years

    SUN VALLEY - A team of food science students from Utah State University won the 2024 Idaho Milk Processors Association’s new product competition, held last week. USU’s Cache Cookies with a dairy dip earned them bragging rights and $10,000. Their product was introduced at IMPA’s annual meeting in Sun Valley, Idaho.

    The contest was sponsored by Dairy West and judged by leading dairy farmers and industry experts. The annual contest challenges universities with strong nutrition and food science programs to create the most promising new food product containing at least 50 percent dairy ingredients.

  • Salt Lake Tribune Monday, Aug. 19, 2024

    Cache Valley to the cosmos: Satellite that mapped the universe powers down

    NASA’s universe-mapping and asteroid-hunting satellite — assembled in Logan nearly 15 years ago — has officially been powered down, leaving a piece of Cache Valley among the stars.

    Until, of course, it burns up in Earth’s atmosphere later this year.

    The final command to shut off the satellite’s transmitter was sent this month, marking the end of a mission that exceeded expectations, according to a NASA news release.

  • KSL Wednesday, Aug. 14, 2024

    Researchers study the toxicity and airborne spread of algal blooms

    PROVO — University students are investigating whether algal blooms in Utah Lake could be airborne in a study that started this week.

    Utah State University students will repeatedly send a drone boat into the lake's water during the week. This is not only safer for students when the water is rough but might also be healthier for them as they study the algal blooms.

    "The thing is, if, let's say, the boat tips over or they get to come in contact with it, they do get sick. You don't want that to happen," said Dylan McPeake, a Master's student in civil and environmental engineering at USU.

  • Navajo-Hopi Observer Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2024

    USU breaks ground on Monument Valley academic center

    MONUMENT VALLEY, Utah — Representatives of Utah State University (USU) and the Navajo Nation broke ground for a long-awaited academic building in a ceremony on the morning of Aug. 2. The education building, which will be located just northwest of Monument Valley High School, will serve students and community members of the Navajo Nation.

    “The new USU Monument Valley Education Building strengthens the commitment to higher education and opportunities to rural and Indigenous communities,” said Kristian Olsen, senior associate vice president for USU Blanding.

    The education building will include modern classrooms, computer labs, a nursing and CNA lab, a career and technical education lab, a small business development space, a welding lab, spaces for adult education and more.

  • UPR Tuesday, Aug. 13, 2024

    USU rolls out new engineering tech degree

    Utah State University approved a new engineering technology degree, in hopes of giving students more opportunities.

    The degree is intended to bridge the gap between academia and industry. The program was designed with input from both areas to give students more knowledge and experiences.

    Richard Hawkes is the director of programs at Northrop Grumman and was vital in the conception and development of this new degree.

  • Salt Lake Tribune Saturday, Jul. 27, 2024

    A look into Utah's favorite ice cream brand

    After witnessing all the steps taken to create one of Utah’s favorite ice cream brands, Cache Valley resident Savanna Mccay learned an important lesson.

    “Cows,” Mccay said, “are the best things on earth.”

    Earlier this month, Utah State University held its annual “Cow to Cone” event, where community members had the chance to peek into the entire process behind the delectable taste of Aggie Ice Cream, deemed by many (aside from the devotees of BYU Creamery) as Utah’s most mouth-watering campus confection.

  • The Seattle Times Thursday, Jul. 25, 2024

    The Great Salt Lake isn't just drying out. It's warming the planet.

    Like some dystopian astronaut, Melissa Cobo would hike the searing flats of the dried-out Great Salt Lake every couple of weeks, hauling a heavy backpack attached by a hose to what looked like the lid of a cake dome. What remained of the lake often seemed out of reach as she struggled through hot mud, clay and a weird crystalline layer that broke with her footsteps onto a greenish muck.

    “You see the water, but you never actually get to it, no matter how many hours you walk,” Cobo said.

    Through these grueling treks, Cobo, then a Utah State University graduate student, and her adviser, Soren Brothers, discovered more disturbing evidence that dried-out lakes are a significant source of carbon dioxide emissions — one that has not been included in the official accounting of how much carbon the world is releasing into the warming atmosphere.

  • The Herald Journal Tuesday, Jul. 16, 2024

    USU researchers work with UDOT to develop vertiports

    A group at Utah State University is working with the Utah Department of Transportation to bring air transportation to an urban level using vertiports.

    Associate professor Brent Chamberlain and some of his students are working with UDOT Aeronautics Division to identify possible locations for these ‘vertical airports’ in the Wasatch Front.

    The ongoing project is part of UDOT’s efforts to integrate air travel into urban transportation. Vertiports are centers for safe takeoffs and landings and provide maintenance or repairs to unmanned or electric aircraft within a community.

  • MSN Wednesday, Jul. 10, 2024

    USU to open center for digital accessibility within education

    A new center coming to Utah State University this fall will provide accessible digital materials to students with disabilities.

    Cynthia Curry, director of the National Center on Accessible Digital Educational Materials and Instruction, or NCADEMI, said the facility will address, what she calls, the "longstanding and historical issues" around access to educational materials for students with disabilities. She added the role of NCADEMI is to help ensure those with disabilities receive digital educational materials in a way that they can use them.

    "The standard way that a lot of educational materials are produced and provided to students, inherently have those barriers to students with sensory disabilities, physical disabilities and learning disabilities. NCADEMI is a technical assistance center that sets out to provide support and services specifically to educational agencies," she explained.

  • Deseret News Thursday, Jul. 04, 2024

    Space: How Utah's decades of technology expertise is paying off

    Houston, Cape Canaveral and ... Dugway?

    Yes, one of these is most assuredly not like the others and some folks may not even know that the Defense Department’s Dugway Proving Ground in Utah’s west desert has become a prime landing location for returning space missions. But the places that have become synonymous with U.S. space flight and exploration may be quietly acquiring a new sibling as Utah parlays its decades of space-related activities into a more starring role in the burgeoning cosmos business.

    As it turns out, there’s a whole lot of technology, components and know-how with Utah roots that have ventured, or will venture, beyond the boundaries of our home planet.

  • Cache Valley Daily Wednesday, Jul. 03, 2024

    Five USU faculty receive Fulbright awards

    LOGAN - Every year through the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program more than 800 scholars, students, teachers and professionals of all backgrounds teach or conduct research.

    Among those receiving Fulbright Scholar Program awards for the 2024-25 academic year are four Utah State University professors who will teach or conduct research abroad.

    The group includes Ryan Berke, from the College of Engineering, who will travel to the United Kingdom; Brent Chamberlain, College of Agriculture and Applied Sciences who is traveling to Portugal; David Feldon, who in early 2025 will travel to Australia; and, Kimberly Hageman, College of Science who will travel to Italy.

  • Cache Valley Daily Tuesday, Jul. 02, 2024

    USU scientists join national project on heat resilience

    LOGAN - Extreme heat is one of the deadliest climate risks in the United States. It kills more people on average than any other kind of extreme weather.

    In an effort to promote community heat resilience across the country, the National Integrated Heat Information System (NIHHS) has funded two virtual centers of excellence, one of which includes researchers at Utah State University.

    Dr. Wei Zhang and other USU climate scientists are part of the Center for Collaborative Heat Monitoring in Durham, North Carolina. They will provide technical support in the $2.3 million program for collaborating science museums in Arizona, Oregon and Massachusetts.

  • KUTV Tuesday, Jul. 02, 2024

    USU study highlights gender disparity in unpaid care work

    SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — A study by the Utah Women and Leadership Project at Utah State University shed light on the gender disparity in unpaid caregiving work in Utah.

    The research found that when it comes to doing unpaid work like childcare, eldercare and household chores, women carry most of the burden — doing over four hours of unpaid care work daily compared to over two hours for men.

    Nationally, the dollar value of women's unpaid work is $10.8 trillion each year.

  • Associated Press Tuesday, Jul. 02, 2024

    Utah Professor's Coast to Coast Bike Ride Fundraiser

    SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, UNITED STATES, July 2, 2024 / EINPresswire.com / -- It began on Monday June 3, 2024, Utah State University Professor Mike Glauser and 5 of his colleagues will began a grueling cross-country journey from Florence, Oregon to Yorktown, Virginia in hopes of helping to end world poverty.

    Glauser, the Executive Director of the Center for Entrepreneurship, Jon M. Huntsman School of Business for the past thirteen years, along with his team, which includes a documentary film crew, will follow the TransAmerica Trail reaching Yorktown Virginia on July 20th. This cross-country journey, Pedaling to End Poverty, is an effort towards raising scholarship money for a special program the school offers. Glauser is a man on a mission, with stops at dozens of small towns and hamlets in between, a crusade that’s sure to draw attention all along his route, and one everyone can easily be a part of.

  • Cache Valley Daily Monday, Jul. 01, 2024

    David Jones named new Dean of USU College of Engineering

    LOGAN - The new dean of Utah State University’s College of Engineering — David Jones — plans to assume his new position Oct. 1, leaving the University of Nebraska where he directed the Biological Systems Engineering Department for six years.

    He succeeds Jagath Kaluarachchi who announced his retirement last November, effective June 30 of this year. The outgoing dean said in his final months he would work to expand the Utah Earthquake Engineering Center into a custom-built headquarters that would accommodate a state-of-the-art research operation with large shaker tables for simulating seismic loads.

  • The Herald Journal Monday, Jun. 24, 2024

    Hundreds of people participate in USU Juneteenth celebrations

    State and local government offices were closed last week in celebration of Juneteenth, also called Freedom Day or Emancipation Day.

    Hundreds of people participated in Utah State University events to celebrate the holiday including a concert, 5K run, barbeque and musical workshop.

    Director of Inclusive Excellence Isaiah Jones said he felt like the activities all went well.

  • Cache Valley Daily Monday, Jun. 17, 2024

    Juneteenth celebrations underway at Utah State University

    LOGAN - Utah State University’s three days of events celebrating Juneteenth continue Wednesday, commemorating the end of slavery in America.

    USU’s fourth annual Juneteenth observance started with a performance on the Quad by the USU Alumni Band Sunday night, June 16.

    Wednesday begins with an 8 a.m. Fun Run followed by the annual 5K at 8:30. Most of the proceeds from those two events will go to a memorial on the USU campus honoring Mignon Barker Richmond, the first African-American student to graduate from a university in Utah. Everyone is invited to the Juneteenth Community BBQ at Bridger Park in Logan with activities for families and children. Food is served at 6 p.m. and it is free.

  • UPR Tuesday, Jun. 11, 2024

    USU unveils 'state-of-the-art' nursing education suite, doubles capacity

    When Father Rick Lawson, a contributor to the Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services, first visited the underutilized locker space in Utah State University's recreation building in 2022 — which would later become the new Emma Eccles Jones Advanced Nursing Education Suite — he was skeptical about its transformation.

    But when he attended the ribbon-cutting ceremony for the space along with more than 100 community members and faculty of Utah State University on Monday, he quickly changed his mind.

    “Today when I walked in, I was just absolutely overwhelmed,” Lawson said. “It’s fantastic, beautiful, state-of-the-art, and will be such a great facility for the students to really learn their skills.”

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