OCR Text |
Show ijjlijn ip rniwr Kg' Tlff "Kir IJif;fllyiryrfl'JBTTff'Tyrii p yj)- -, r.g ry VlPH ymi j m Ap By LAVOR K. CHAFFIN signed to earmark funds for Deseret News Education Editor certain programs, a strategy intended to put some funds The 1971 Utah Legislature beyond the reach of collective not only will deal with educabargaining. tion in terms of dollars and The UEA program would it will have to cope cents put priority on the teacher, in related philosophical with effect putting more money on issues. the bargaining table. Two major groups already Both Dr. Walter D. Talbot, have formulated legislative state superintendent of programs. One, which will be and Darld J. termed School Boarfls, is Long, executive secretary of the work of a joint comnjittee the Utah School Boards Assocomposed of members of the ciation, say the School Utah School Boards AssociaBoards proposal is designed to meet critical needs, they tion, the State Board of Education and the Society of Sutake the position that the only The other is way certain needs can be met perintendents. the Utah Education Associais to appropriate funds for tion. particular purposes. The School Boards proposal Dr. Daryl J. McCarty, is program oriented. It is de UEA executive secretary, public-instructio- Boards spokesmen if you leave the that say money where the teachers can get it, theyll take it all. School says the teachers legislative program has been developed around the concept of accountability. Both McCarty and James The Legislature will have to judge which group has the (Jim) Peacock, UEA legislative specialist, take the position that teachers have been subsidizing" other programs. In order to get money for other purposes, McCarty says, administrators and boards of education increase classroom better approach. In order to present different views on school legislative the Deseret News issues, talked to Talbot, Long and McCarty. Following are some issues, beginning with areas where there is essential agreement, with comment from the three leaders. loads, thus penalizing both the teacher and the student. either ought to provide dollars to fit the programs or cut programs to fit the dollars, McCarty states. If the Legislature approves 10 programs but provides only We CONTRACTS Talbot: TEACHERS. We cant stand to go through annual negotiations which are a dispproportionate taking of amount time and resources. Long: The Legisla- -TW- O-YEAR FOR enough money for seven, we should ask which three do yon want to cut? DESERET NEWS ture should consider two-yea- -- C 0 N T I NCENCY RE- SERVE. All agree that school districts, like other businesses, should have a small reserve for emergencies or unanticipated need. -- DRIVER TRAINING. Both the School Hoards and the UEA suggest the $1 fee added to the auto license plate charge be increased to S1.50 in order to pay full costs of driver education classes now u. v i running in the red in many districts. Talbot says the $1.50 r appropriations, we can't go through this kind of strife every year. McCarty: We'd like to get back to the business of teaching school. The fiUEA suggests two-yenancing with an annual adjustment based on changes in the cost of living. would produce more than is needed now, and proposes some of the extra be used to underwrite district development of automated programs to reduce the cost of driver education. -P- RIVATE y All mm V : x SCHOOLS. agree that the State Board of Education shou'd be to set minimum empowerd standards for private schools. Talbot: We want to protect the good image of many fine private schools and at the same lime assure that students are not exploited by other schools." Al-T- RANSPORTATION: though there are minor differences in approach, both groups favor essential full groups i x Rotary President Sees Service Need Deseret News Staff Writer Personal service, not purse service is the answer to the worlds most urgent William E. Walk Jr., needs, president of Rotary International, said in Salt Lake City today. He was scheduled to address local Rotary members and delegates from other Rotary clubs throughout Utah and Idaho at a noon luncheon in Hotel Utah. The worldwide service association he heads involves William . E. Walk Jr. "act now" Ollil MAH mtr V Tenting Tonight The Christmas loot included some camping equipment. The gals of the house apparently want me from underfoot come summer. But the gifts did get me to reminiscing about our weekend camping trips when I was a kid back in the stone age. Camping in those days was a simple matter. If you were lucky, you could find a hunk of canvas for a floorless tent. Food consisted of weiners, a can of tuna fish and some bread. steel pole if you Equipment included a bamboo stick. Line was heavy, were lucky, or a but cheap. A kid would grab a couple of old blankets, and announce to the family that me and the guys are going camping in the fork. 49-ee- 10-ce- nt FAST GETAWAY Then you ran out of earshot so there would be no chance of being called back to cut the lawn before you left. It was strictly a boys weekend. In those days, the head of the house had no desire to have a father and sons outing. In fact, the neighbors would have thought him a bit dingy had he gone along. But it is all changed now. Its a family affair, and ' that is good. Tents have lost out to campers and trailers. The old skinny dipping in the river for a bath has been replaced with a hot shower in camper. The camp fire isn't the same. There was something about building a camp fire by gathering twigs and branches. The half raw weiners weren't half bad, and the badly burned ones were delicious. Now we have frozen dinners, camp stoves, hot water, camp refrigerators to keep any type of food. Somehow, it just doesn't taste the same. FIT FOR A KING The blanket on the lumpy earth has been replaced with beds as soft as those at home. Even without the camper, a tent can be furnished with a cot, air mattress, and sleeping bag. No king ever slept in more comfort. , Back in the bread and w'einer days, a kid and his buddies could camp over a weekend without seeing another soul. Now campers are bumper to bumper. Tent cities are set up over night and solitude is a thing of the past. It is getting so crowded out in the hills that a lot of people are staying home where there is just a bit of ' privacy. It could happen' that people will start staying home from the hills and the pollution. Then some day, 50 years from now, some kid will ha ve a great idea. Hell grab a blanket, some weiners and a loaf of bread and head for the hills! WITS END An old timer is a guy who had to hold onto his cap when he went for a plari ride ! where ment. ate some areas there is less agree- PRACPROFESSIONAL TICES Would ACT, give teachers the right and reof setting own sponsibility standards of competence and k;A : . 7 ethics. N E G OTIATIONS. The w iiii propose a biil giving UEA teachers the right to negotiate and providing for binding fact finding to end impasse. Boards of education will REGARDING ROLE OF SCHOOL CLERK. Tims proposed by UEA and generally supported by other groups. The change would make the oppose the bill on grounds that such binding arbitration See PHILOSOPHICAL, 0 By MAXINE MARTZ Deseret News Staff Writer Utahns were too cold even to shiver this morning as the mercury plunged to 33 below zero at Woodruff, Rich County, 30 below at Bryce Canyon, 21 below at Roosevelt and 18 below at Milford and other Rotary officials and guests. Walk sees the various issues that threaten law and order, environment and economic equality and racial harmony as the most pressing problems ol our time. I have visited in 40 countries, been around the world twice, talked with Pope Paul and leaders from many nations. These problems are universal and are recognized We he said. everywhere, must examine what can be done and bridge the s o co 1 o g i c a 1 and generation gaps. CRYING FOR HELP Walk stressed the need for immediate action by people Youth are everywhere. crying out for help, he said. We must hear their cries. Rotarians must help develop new understanding, new relationships with people of all nations in this new decade, he said. We must expand our efforts to initiate dub, community, vocational and international projects that will accomplish these objectives. We must, this year, give greater emphasis to what Rotarians can do about this There problem, he added. must be a renewed realization, not just financial support, that Rotarians are ready and willing to better serve communities, their countries and their fellow man. Not much warmer were Delta with 17 below, Green River 15 below, Bland-in- g 12 below, Vernal 10 below and Cedar City 9 below. Only a few stations managed to stay above the zero mark. Salt Lake City's low was zero recorded a few minutes after 8 a.m.. After a low of 1 above zero was reported Monday morning, the temperature dropped to 2 below between 7 and 8 a.m., making it the coldest morning since nearly five years ago when the mercury read 3 below zero on Feb. 13, 19fi6. t y News Photo by O. Wallace Kasteler of D. C. Jackling, left, copper pioneer, and Col. Thomas L Kane overlook impressive Diamond Jubilee ceremonies at Capitol Jubilee Ceremonies Spotlight Education By PAUL RICHARDS Deseret News Staff Writer are we losing our Why youth? Why are they so critical? Why do they drop out of school or stay in only in body but not in mind? at the moral rearmament evident throughout the world. Leaders everywhere are looking at problems realizing that they must be solved These questions were asked today by Mrs. Helen B. Ure, vice chairman of the Utah State Board of Education, in remarks prepared for delivery during Education and Youth Day ceremonies at noon in the now. From Ontario, Calif., Walk serves on the judicial bench in California and is a senior partner in the law firm of Walk, Etchason, Davidson, Liesch & Thomas. Richard L. Evans was honorary chairman of a special Rotary committee to welcome Walk to Utah. He has assisted by Leland S. Swaner, immediate past president of Salt Lake Rotary Club, and other immediate past presidents. Dr. Joseph H. Mayfield, governor of Rotary District 542, along with his wife, was host for the noon meeting, which included a presentation to the distinguished visitor. State Capitol. S. Lawmen Told To Curb Bias Bertell Bunker, associate commissioner for Business Affairs, Utah System of Higher Education, also was to at the ceremonies speak which were part of the nine-da- y Utah Statehood Diamond Jubilee festivities. Diamond Jubilee activities will continue through Jan. 11 with speeches at the Capitol, open houses throughout the state and carillon concerts daily at 4 p.m. from atop the First Security Bank Building. cele Highlight of the nine-da- y bration was tire lighting of candle-powe- r four lights atop the Capitol Monday accompanied by a one-milli- n which shrouded the building in smoke. introduced Gov. Rampton See JUBILEE on Page 2 salute Nixon Greets Utah On 75th Anniversary President Richard M. Nixon congratulated the state of Utah on the 75th anniversary of its statehood in a telegram received by Gov. Calvin L. Rampton. The telegram reads as fol- lows: My warmest greetings to you and the people of Utah on the 75th anniversary of your state. All who have visited Utah have reason to share your pride in its impressive progress, in its natural beauty. and above all, in the spirit of its people. True to the tenacious char- - acter, diligence and integrity of its earliest Mormon settlers, your state has confronted the challenges of the modern era in the finest American way: through high ideals and hard work. The beehive is most appropriately the emblem of a state which, by the industry and vitality of its people, has immeasurably enhanced the prosperity of our nation. May the next quarter century be as rewarding for the people of Utah as they have made these first three for the nation whose history they continue to enrich. Deseret News Staff Writer At the ski resorts temperatures are dropping from 15 to 25 below zero at night and warming to highs of only zero to 10 during the day. The forecast indicates very little respite until the end of the week when highs may move up into the mid 20s and lows will be only zero to 10 above. Lows tonight will be from 5 to 15 below again across the state and highs Wednesday will range from 15 to 25. PARTLY CLOUDY flurries tonight. Because of the extreme cold Monday, Mountain Fuel Supply Co. had to cut natural gas services to some of its and many schools in Salt Lake and Granite School Districts and in Davis County switched to standby coal or oil heating. The emergency systems were also in operation in the schools today. The interrupt-abl- e customers are those See COLD on Page B I2 inter-ruptabl- B line between yards. At that moment, a police officer hops out of his patrol car at the curb. Rather than cooling the disagreement, the patrolman fans the flames by immediately taking sides in the argument, handing out legal opinions as if he were an attorney and insulting the black man with derogatory racial references. i TRAINING METHODS New methods of training for police officers and administrators including and the use of of video instant replay are being used in the tapes seminar. We sincerely believe that only as we can separate our personal biases and prejudices from official duties, can we truly become professional poe the Utah lice officers. SEPARATE on Page 7-- 9 10, 1! Action Ads G Radical propaganda presented on a university campus by a guerrilla theater group? On the contrary, the roles in this particular skit were taken by police officers and were acted out Monday for police chiefs and county sheriffs from throughout t'ne state at Utah's first Law Enforcement Executive Development Institute. Sponsored by POST (Police Officers Standards and Training), the institute continued today on the University of Utah campus. role-playi- City, Regional 1, 3, 5, 6, 12, 20 1 Our Man Jones 2 Comics 4 TV Highlights Sports Financial Weather Map Obituaries Two neighbors one black, one white are embroiled in a violent argument because one of the men has chopped down a tree on the property ROLE-TAKIN- Skies will be clear to partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday with a chance of snow SECTION J By ROBERT D. MULLINS HIGH OF ZERO Oeseret their MORAL STRENGTH He said he is thrilled es conflict. Following Everywhere -i 700,030 members of 14,400 Rotary clubs located in 148 countries. He was greeted at the airport this morning by Richard L. Evans, past president of and International, Rotary e. Shivers g By BRENT CLEMENT of the school district responsible to the superintendent. He now reports directly to the Board of Education, which sometimes causclerk-treasur- Frigid Utah t SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH Tuesday, January 5, 1971 of transportation so funding districts would not have to use maintenance and operation (M & 0) funds tor the pur-lsWould take about SI. 000.000 additional. -- TAX CO L LECTIONS. Both groups take the position that the schools should not be required to colled sales taxes for items or services sold to students and that districts should not have to p.,y sales taxes on purchases. Talbot: One agency government should not he taxing another government agency." -- C H A N G E STATUTES 13 Law-Se- 13 B-- 8 13-1- 9 Utah Reflects Eeonomk Plight In US. expected to jump this year, of tiie primarily because demand for housing and the of interest rates. lowering Government jobs will be hampered by continued cuts in the federal sector. By JOSEPH LUNDSTKOM Deseret News Staff Writer Even as the nations economic slowdown has affected Utahs employment growth during 1970, so it will continue Unemployment. to jeopardize growth in 1971. Growth will be modest, but nigh unemployment is expected to remain a serious prob- lem. The problem will become even more serious if the state suffers major strikes in the copper and steel industries a possibility. Bill Harpster, labor economist wi.h the Utah Department of Employment Security, made these forecasts today. A fair first half and a slowsecond half, with rising unem- ployment, summarizes Utah's market for the year just unfortu- nately, will probably creep up to 6.1 per cent, from the current 5.9 per cent rate, Harpster noted. It is also possible that Utah could suffer a major copper strike and steel strike beginning in the summer of 1971. If that should occur, total wage and salary growth for 1971 would be cut approximately in half, and unemployment would rise slightly higher as a result of secondary layoffs caused by the strikes. - he said. Manufacturing jobs should Increase a bit: in 1971, with concluded, j good growth in machinery particularly computers and apparel. JJut electrical equip- - ment and food processing sec- tors will likely suffer job loss- es, according to Harpster. gain? Mining employment will level off in 1971, but cor.-jo- struction employment b So much for 1971. What does the job picture See UTAH on Page c B-- fi ' |