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Show WESTERN AMERICANA Judge Declares Taxpayer lights (See page 6) kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk'&'kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk k The k k Dndeperiaegiif k . V A te5 - VEHIVE ST&, A k Dedicated To Jhe Cpnstitution, Liberty, Morality, and Tjruth MU' 9 Oa 25W JSalt Lake City, Utah 84106 Volume 2 Number 21 lnws jjudk because the presentation was Dayne Belnap, age 16, is a junior at Salt Lake Citys East High School. Dayne claims that his English teacher, Mrs. William B. Smart, appears to be prejudiced against conservatives and against minority groups such as the John Birch Society. Mrs. Smart seemed to display her prejudice .in class on politically oriented. As a result, the students were walking in and out at will during the presentation. According to a statement Dayne made to the Utah Independent , much of the subject matter that we had been discussing for the past two or three weeks had been politically oriented. The teacher had chosen and assigned the subject of Black Literature and the November 15th when she encouraged the students to interrupt the report by asking questions during the presentation rather than waiting until the end, as had been done with previous reports by other students. Before Dayne had finished his presentation, the teacher got up and announced that anyone who wanted to leave could do so November 19, 1971 historical and contemporary problems of Black America. Toward the end of Daynes presentation he showed the civil rights filmstrip Show Business In The Streets by Gary Allen. I was not allowed to even get through the end of this filmstrip, let alone draw conclusions at the end, he said. The teacher turned on the light while the filmstrip was being shown and suggested that maybe it was time to go. Dayne had previously arranged to use the whole class period. Then five minutes before class was to let out, said Dayne, she again turned on the lights and said, This is the end; we wont go any ' " 'V: , V , ' s' - ' ' ' . 's. ' ... ' further. Daynes report topic was Martin Luther King and the ' .r, Negro Problem in America. He tried to show his classmates how Uvl ' . ' agitators caused racial disorder and then he tried to present a K Continued On Page 4 J x. VV'-'-. A-- to ? ..v Dayne Belnap Tax Money Publishes Newspapers in Salt Lake The taxpayers of this taxpayers of Salt Lake County are footing the bill for the of two publication n re ce established tly -- in Salt Lake City. The papers are the Salt Lake Model Neighborhood News and newspapers foremost professional . W. Cleon Skousen Skousen to Speak on December 3 The Cry For A New will be the subject Constitution of W. Cleon Skousens coming address at the UTAH FORUM FOR THE AMERICAN IDEA, The Forum meeting will be 8:00 P.M., December 3rd at Granite Park Junior High School, 450 East 3700 South in Salt Lake; - Mr. Skousen is a former administrative assistant to J. Edgar Hoover and served 16 years in the F.B.I. He served four years as Chief of Police of Salt Lake. City and is presently a teacher at the Brigham Young University and editorial director of Law and Order magazine, the nations On U.S. Center For The Study of Democratic Institutions. On January 4, 1971, these groups a proposed new constitution and advocated its adoption, claiming it to be a great improvement over our original Constitution. The cry has recently been taken up in the U.S. Senate by Hubert Humphrey and others who advocate re-evaluati- on County taxpayers and the taxpayer burdens) according to the papers own declaration, and has already had twelve issues published. According to recent Program. issues, Neighborhood News and a a Constitutional rewriting of the role of our national legislature. ... Department of Housing and Urban Development. L The Joint Board of Commissioners in charge are listed as James L. Barker, Jr., Chairman, and Philip R. Blomquist, George B. Catmull, E. J. Garn, Ralph Y. McClure, and E. Dunn, local citizens members. Some have noticed the similarity of the name, Central City Worker to the Communist publication, The Worker. At least one person observed that Utah citizens who have had to send out of state to subscribe to The Worker can now drop their subscriptions and receive the Central City Worker, THtUTfM INDEPENDENT. P.O. Box 6274 Salt Salt Lake Worker is printed twice a month and has just printed volume 1 number 3. According to Andy Gallegos, who . is in charge of neighborhood operations for CAP in Salt Lake, the paper is supported by some volunteer labor and funds, by some advertising, and by a grant of $1,000 from county tax money. He claims there is no federal money involved. The paper has offices at 327 East Sixth South in Salt Lake City and seems to be benefitting from use of these Central City at CAP facilities. 1 According to volume number 2, The Central City Worker is a non-profi- t, community ... newspaper. The non-partisa- n We hope to Worker twice a publish month. The nature of this community newspaper was illustrated amply in the page 2 editorial of volume 1 number 1. non-partis- The following an non-partisan- w editorial comments were made Continued On Page 14 Second ake City. Utah 84106 Community Action ed The Central City is a possible through a grant from the William tax-financ- The Model Model Cities Agency under the supervision of the Joint Board of City and County Commissioners is made . . . .Publication police Police, and The Naked Capitalist. The current campaign for a new constitution has been guided by two far left organizations,The Fund For The Republic and The published The Model Neighborhood News is free (like other publication of the journal. Among his many writings are The Naked Communist, The Communist Attack compliments of the Salt Lake the CentralCity Worker. charitable nation and the I Class Salt Lake Postage Paid City, Utah Scriaic'Ordcr Department C7L of Utah Libraries University S .It Lake C i r, ty j Utah Dsl 9 . - t . -- |