OCR Text |
Show October 2t, li51 lleasant (Utahi lraii'.hl Mt. TO' wild reme .v t the v! Siting c',t war! is s. heduled for tit Itiol S et .!. Mi ,e:..ne at the sat mment i s' ' i Ml wild otfieers o "1 vint was numbers are t Ht P in .ote to attend up Spring Oily Nous oof tt on si fvir ald i i Hike F i.t d : c t w ! Mis Ft. hi t.e Si hofit t i? Salt - hi f f .r " e week-r patent Mr and i sd., f in 1 vld i .',e i hit) nn " Ur- - wete the ot Mrs F.aru iVnaldson at in r home Wednesday e tiling M.ss Ignore Allred and Mss lbr wvie Mis Fvelvn guests a Ama-gathered at the at Terry Joyve Softllsen. otlploled id Mis lr-Vdted Mis'W'm-onhome for the hur.t and also Slt ms. led home Sutur't..v, Allrevi Mrs c'ht.stie ltunneil, tv d i brute th. s2nd b ithvlav and Smiday Mrs Ihna Mtid Mis Henm e ot the giandmotht r, Hansen Mis Ivuhv cl.uk. Mis Vis. ting Saturday and Sunday Mrs Olive lt it tu tt Hules who in Sa.t citv, but who it the Inure of Mr and Mrs Kv- lived und nuied her huge family rttt Strate were Mr. ami Mrs Mi Keen Strate of Salt Lake in Fairview. City. The dvath ot Mr ai.d Mrs Ter! Justtusen Flit! and d.mgh-t.- r ry's hot), Bold dating the deer hunt Sunday morning Ju.ly Kay Juster.sen of Mld-'alstopped the happunss of t ht- oci asiun visited Mrs liuth Osborne Mrs, Ohe Pntihelt Halts, Mr, Mis Jane Jnstes.n and Mr am! and Mrs Melrose Pritchett Mr. Mrs Moisdtn Allied Saturday to Sanders Pritihett Mr June Prit- Monday chett, John Frank Pritchett, Mr. and Mrs. Peed Mads. n. Mr and FDIlOK'.s N O I K lhe following item U telng nin not as mud adMrs IJovd Ttiry. Mrs Thelma but as a pnt.lie service to readers vertising of this newspaper so Woodward Mis Ihvhndu Turpin were all at the Terry home Sunday. The PriUhitt tair.ily k'U-st- a 0 0 0 es e Mr. and Mrs Milo Miner of PROPOSED RAI Po- mona, Calif, were i event vis. tors at the home of Mr and Mrs Martin Nordstrom Mrs. Miner is the daughter of Mrs. Nordstrom The Miners have two sons in Utah, one attending USAC at Logan, and one attending HYP, Provo. In company with Mr and Mrs Nordstrom the Miners visited both Provo an! and hid dinner one day up the beautiful Ogden with Canyon They also visited Mr Nordstiimis son, Leland and fomih m Spanish Fork Mr and Mm Y F M iver. the daughter of Mr .tnd Mrs. Milo Miner. visited last week m Fairv'iew with Mr and Mrs Martin Nordstrom They ate fiom San Piego Ned A Tucker of KIMonte, Cal., came to Fairview for the deer hunt and also to visit with rela- tives A strip of wax paper uciween the hat and the leather sweat band, gents will keep the hat ribbon from getting stained by it. it. on or li.i.r lotion. per-- , The artist ought never to perpetuate a temporary expression. - Ralph Waldo Emerson Commissioner r. Is w ol k o w ot V. Sure to Be a Moroni Blackham I OT TITLE IN letes I'M Fol. Adv lyi'l i!H; MASKS CANDY ii,V"ifi!"&kriit-- : PHONb 94S the pros ami cans eoneerulug the reap(Ktr(linu.venl problem on whieii Vett rs will also t ;Lst their vote next Tut-sdil- REFERENDUM OF SENATE BILL 39 REFEKEMUM Ob M Vl'E IU1. 1 .!9 (( 11 PI I K 2t. IAWS uF 11 All. IT IBS I Si 1X1AL SESSION) I - 1 0 s R AGAINST dent of Texas. Chris .n I'niu-isitm hi- - address at In- - .1, i.t of th. 's, lat.on of Am e . n GidUg, .s " I si e it, : o tall soluLon of this problem f higher edu ' cataml involves of ou rating tlu on the In ivmplete i con-ver-io- a new .1 notion, a return to vital roll. n as the focal ceii i of ALL i .id oducition It will not sufl.ee to have r ligion merely ns oee stone in the total education:. hu hhng. It must he the ovei n a. lung beam, 30 tla re were 1210 euiiti idh d colleges and Tms statement npii-atdthe as compared with only vitw of a non p.utism group, (ill publnly controlled -- a ratio of sore Ki pnhia'.uis, sane IK inn- two private institutions to one er. its, same Morn on, some 'public. Mas:- toluiM ttu, always all ol whom believe the as a great seat of Annri-c.the focalizing center, the per cu.se of od loation will bo host education, lias 23 puvate colmeiting spirit, the uniting feive soi id by voting for the transfer. leges and univ ei Mtn s compared vvhuh gives meiiii.ng ami to 9 public. Nivv oik has 4'l prito all suhi.its and AI 1. lllsTORIFAL HACKCiKoUND vate collegia and universities and Coll! si S. If God IK tin- ultinvito OF THE 1SSI F, 7 public. In contrast, Utah has and controlling reality of life, Tin se col.igis me historically only 3 private colb gt s and univerleal umg is obviously inadequate Church mst.tuuons. Snow Colligi sities (L. A. U., Westminster, and unless it does confess linn as was founded by the Church in St. Mary's of the Wasatih) ns its Found itnm. 18SS, Wtbcr Coliege in 1889, and compared with 7 public (UniverAs vve see it, this spiritual trainDixie College in 1 y 0. Snow and sity of Utah, Utah State Agricul- ing is desirable for nil students, Weber wue opi rated by the tural College, Colhge of Southiin and it has been the policy of that Church for uvir 40 years, Dixie for Utah, Woln r, Dixie. Simvv and Church to admit to iti institutions taibon Juinor Uo.hgesl. Uuither of higher learning members over 110 years. In the early 19o0 of all these throe the Church voluntarily deeded the puvate institutions religious faiths. property and buildings owned by have an cniollment of less than d tv lime stuthese colleges to the State on con- 4, 0l0 legular FACULTY. STUDENT BODY, and dition that, if the State ever ceas- dents, as compiled with appioxi-matelCURRICULUM POLICIES ll.Ooo rigular in state dayed to operate them as junior col1 he transfer will also assure a time the seven studints at would to the revert leges, they institutions. Church. Compared faculty, probably an In 1950, faced with a Slate fin- with the national ratio tins is a enlarged student body, and an enriched curnculm. ancial crisis, the Governor asked serious lmhalaiu o. The First Presidency has anShould the nUrs approve the the First Presidency what the Church would do should the State transfer, the puvate liistitutams, nounced its intention, if the transwould then number six, fer is approved, to operate these no longer operate these colleges. which with a well qualified The First Presidency replied that, would still have h ss than 6,000 colleges in state students, where- faculty competent to meet educae under the conditions of the deeds, ppoi ted in- tional needs of tlieir respective they would revert to and be oper- as the remaining Tins is significant ated by the Churih. The Governor stitutions would still have more communities. in state stu- to those who remen her that Weber then recommended they be discon- than 9.000 tinued as State institutions. Four dents. Hut Utah Would have a hit- College, for example, when operyears later, the Legislature in a ter balance than now exists be- at'd as a Church school, had at its Special Session approved the Go- tween private and public institu- 'head President David O. McKay and on its faculty such distinvernors rocommendauon. In this tions of higher learning. Should it be objected that the guished educators ns Ernest L. historical setting, their pioposed transfir would merely be to their L. D. S. Church would have con- Wilkinson, now President of Brigham Young Fniversity and Adoriginal founder, which has always trol of four of the six institutions, the answer is ministrator of the entire L.D.S. served the cause of education well. that the Mormon population of Church School System; Dr. Henry SAVING TO TAXPAYERS OF Utah is 74 to of the total. Aldous Dixon, now President of MILLIONS OF DOLLARS WITHUtah State Agricultural College; NO STATE RESPONSIBILITY OUT ADDITIONAL COST TO I)r. Leroy Cowles, former President TO CONTINUE THESE JUNIOR of the INDIVIDUAL MUMPERS OF University of Utah; Dr. A. COLLEGES THE CHURCH L. Winsor, now Director of EduThe State of Utah has properly cation at Cornell University, and The .ransfer of these colleges will save taxpayeis millions of dol- assumed the responsibility of pro- dozens of other men and women lars. Their operation already costs viding elementary who have been recojraized by other and secondary schools close to the educational institutions for their e the State approximately Yme dollars annually, which, with homes of your ) oung boys and girls. educational contributions. Dixie and normal growth, could be inci eased Hut it has never assumed nor can it Snow as Church colleges also twofold, and require additional be expected to assume the respon- numbered on their faculties men who have attained high standing millions for capital improvements. sibility of placing These miliums are badly needed colleges or universities in the back- in education elsewhere. for other educational expenses. Ev- yard of every Also, it is not unlikely that college ery school district is struggling man and woman. There are 1C cit- Church operation of the colleges, with its budget. Many have been ies in Utah having a population which now draw almost all their unable to raise teachers salaries. larger than either Ephraim, where students from their respective comSnow College is located, or St. munities, will result in a more g Almost all are behind in programs. Every elemen- George, where Dixie College is lo- diversified and enlarged student At the present time Utah body. The Church is a world-widtary school in Granite District, for cated. and Louisiana are the only states institution and has student drawing example, is operating on a basis. The superinten- which entirely support junior col- power not possessed by the State, dent advises he sees no end to this leges out of state taxes. Weber as is evidenced by the fact the unfortunate condition for at least College lies midway between the B.Y.U draws over 60 of its stutwo largest schools dents from outside Utah. 10 years. With elementary and high school in the State and less than 50 miles FAIRNESS AND enrollment expected to almost dou- from either certainly not a proCONSTITUTIONALITY ble within the next decade so that hibitive distance to expect a mathe need for additional funds will ture student to go for higher eduIt should finally be emphasized be desperate, and taxes already cation. And again let it be empha- that the return of the junior colnear the breaking point, the ques- sized that the transfer of these leges will in no sense be a gift tion is whether the State can af- schools to Church operation would of to Church. the any property not mean loss to their the public. As to lands which ford to spend one to two million the Church dollars annually operating these conveyed to the State and for which ADEQUACY OF REMAINING colleges which could be operated the State paid nothing, they will, PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS equally as well, if not better, withof course, revert to the Church out cost to the State. Neither would the proposed trans- as a matter of law, without any This question is sharpened by fer cripple our program of public therefor. That is only fact that their transfer will im- higher education. Even in the im- payment As to lands which have proper. pose no additional burden upon possible event that every student been acquired and buildings built members of the L. D. S. now in the three junior colleges at the of the taxpayers Church. That is because tithing, were to leave and enroll in a of Utah expense the three colleges since unlike State taxes, is voluntary public institution (U. of U.,-- were conveyed to the State, the S. A. C., or the College of Southand represents only 10To of ones First Presidency has given the income. Consequently the Church ern Utah) their number would not assurance that the Church is willuse of tithing for the operation of push total enrollment at these into pay whatever price is fair ing junior colleges, rather than for stitutions as high as it actually and equitable. This magnanimous other purposes, will impose no ad- was after World War II. Then, removes any charge of unditional burden on any member. these three colleges together en- position fairness eliminates any quesThis is in contrast to power of the rolled approximately 15,500 regular tion of and In any e State to impose and collect more students. Last year they properly constitutionality. with the courts and rests and more taxes without any 10fe had a combined enrollment of only need not concern the voters. 1 1 ,0 0 0 e limitation. approximately CONSIDERED DECISION Further, the Churchs ability to students. On that basis, they could e finance these colleges is resolved 'accomodate another 4,500 The r cision to be made is of the First students. The figure is nearly two by the statement not a sudden one. It was proposed Governor to the and that the times total Presidency regular ago e e enrollment last to the Legislature four years disthey will be pleased to have Webof er, Snow and Dixie Colleges re- year of the three junior colleges and has been the subject cussion frequently since then. It turned to the Church, which is in in question. now been b fore the people has a position to operate them in a could Furthermore, they easily for over 8 months. s manner, scholastically be enlarged to handle many more It is a derision vve can make and otherwise. Indeed, we are ad- students, if necessary. To do so vised that should the Church op- would be much less expensive than with full confidenee that the future erate these colleges, the percent- providing separate campuses, build- of all education inandUtah, elemenhigher, will secondary, age of its annual income which it ings, and faculties for small stu- tary. be brighter when the transfer is will Fper.d on education will not dent bodies. made. be more than it has often spent GREATER SPIRITUAL in the past. I, LAMONT F. TORONTO. SecEMPHASIS of state of the State of retary THE TRANSFER WILL GIVE DO HEREBY CERTIFY The Church of Utah, UTAH A LETTER LALANCEI) administration would is a full, cormean, of THAT the foreg-.nEDUCATIONAL SYSTEM OF course, a on the rect and true cepv of the argument emphasis greater HIGHER LEARNING for transfer of Weber, Snow and (Spiritual side ol education. of religious denomination, Dixie Junior Colleges, as filed by Utahns often fail to remember that historically the very heart of this is a vital need in education the Committee Er The Return of higher education in America has and is a modern trend we have Junior College, been the private and the church watched with approval. In a world I IN WITNESS WHEREOF, college. We forget that such great threatened by godless Communism, have hereunto s't my hand and institutions as Stanford, Harvard, courses emphasizing the Christian affixed the seal of the state and Yale, were founded for reli- concept of the dignity and primary of Utah at great Salt Lakq City, this unaware of to the are individual the as opposed gious purposes. Many 2bth day of September, 1954. that in 1930 there were at least supremacy of the state are indischurch-relateLAMONT F. TORONTO 6P2 colleges and pensable to the proper training of universities in the U. S. Roman college students. This was emphaSecretary of State Catholic 236; Method.st 83; Pres- - sized by Dr. M. E. Sadler, Presi (SEAL) tuXpUV l s. .c en'lcgi,. It1 1 pri-'vate- y , - v sigm-fieai.e- - y high-clas- s day-tim- ta-s- u day-tim- e tax-payin- - p that they may read the pros ami cons eoiieerniug ttie eolh ge Isstu. amt vote as they see fit. .some weeks ago this Mer also puhllslusl d ed been an active Boy Scout leader. He is one of the partners m the Bl.ukham Brothers Garage.He pledges full support to industrial poss.bilities, water projects, education, and all things which will help build Sanpete County. Mr. Blackham is married to the former Dcneu't Guymon of Fountain Gieen and they have two sons and two d mghters. Max. Donnell. and Beverly and Kathleen. Max Donnell are both graduates of one Sno-College and Max was athof the school s outstan J.r.g elii u.iiv or in fV e practically certain that the next for Sanpete commission from a Blackham be will County Moroni. And the Democrats are hoping it will be their man, Earl Blackham. Earl was born in Moroni and has always made his home there where he has been active in both church and civic afairs. He has served in the city council; in the bishopric of the Moroni East Ward of the LDS church for 9 years, and is at present on the stake High Council. He has also been president of the Moroni Cold Storage Locker Association and has - 226 So. Univ. A vo., Provo ay it is i COSTUMES school-buildm- No matter what happens, being- An Art proviibng that Dixie, Snow, and Weber Junior Colleges be discontinued us state n .untamed sehoo Is, and fill trau.st.l hi the Ho ird of mma i.t of all propeity compiising said colleges to n transferee on cond turn that said tiansferee operate them us colleges. If they fail to be operated ,.s colleges, then all said n piopeity shall revolt to the Stale. If sui h tlunsfcr is of doublful conaaulity, or held unconstitutional, the Hoard of Examiners shall sell the properties to the same transfen i for such consult ration as it deems pioper eorisiileimg the saving to tire state in being relieved of tlieir operation. able-bodie- County Commissioner t til nul-lion- Democratic Nominee for ISO h t , , eg i r : i 1 The Peterson Cousins club met at the home of Maud Hartley. The time was spent in reading poems and doing handw-ork- . refreshments weie Dainty served to Lucille Madsen, Surah Rigby, Arnunta Clement, Minerva Burrows. Ellen Peterson, Maknda Tucker, Sylvia Mills, Isabell Bell and Dosena Brown. The next meeting will be held at the home of Eldeva Larsen. 4-Y- i. o t o Mt. Pleasant Drug m Mr. anil Mrs. Jay Hansen spent last weekend in Fairview with her parents, Mr. and Mis. Glen Madsen, and also w i nt deer hunting c'l.ai til i t o t HALLOWEEN A-- or v s git it .1 st ! Five s all had i It" i I i - 1 tit -mla ! I 1 1 M. ! Miss Pae g day-tim- day-tim- day-tim- one-ha- lf full-tim- day-tim- first-clas- -3 d e People should vote AGAINST old 'no .'i,s',i-- t n ee and other forms property and income to only thoe abamio'. e Weber, Snow ami Dixie ol lilnf and social security, the people who are mem-lieof the church. Business and jumot i.' Him uml tiunsfermg tate s, nt more than 20 times industry, utilities, mines, privately owned eorpor.it unit and all the property owned by them would escape pamg any part of their support under such a transfer. vs conii t ntly have shown As all people benefit from educameeting a iiiueh hngei probh in m 111 Slav, it the per capita cost to the state highi r education which will con tion. so all should help pay the Y In t at College are the lowest of costs. As all business and front the stale and its people industry any Colleges operat.-ivvitlun (in m xt several viars. by the state benefits from the higher skills and ami all costs of operating these advances in produced technology by 11 L CONSIDERED line of HASl'Y, ate not out jtimer so all business and IndusACTION when nieasoied by student output education, try should help pay the costs. It is The ration taken separating with the senior colleges or with neither fair nor just that the Btate of other The states. Utah should pass these costs on to the these schools Horn tin public col- colleges round it ion a recent li more limited ability of the LDS ge plant was done hastily and showed that min 1'I3( state andreport local without any eoiisuh at loll of the people to p ty al the costs of these cost ?2MI student only support per while the larger educational needs of the Ftato. for higher education in Utah where- junior t colleges taxable wealth escapes. Yet within the next several as tile national part average was $4.'t7. years Jt.ih will fact the problem costs for Utahs TRANSFER UNFAIR TO higher education of ineieusod output from its high NON-I.Dschools as a lesult of the war and are not burdensome. Through eduPEOILE we increase the income of r uicica.se in birth rate. cation There can no be but Within font teen years tins will our people, supply help for our that the BPS Church question mainwould which calls for industry t growing amount to 178 percent of the a high standard of education mastery of tools and skills tain nnmhei in the state as a whole greater in these schools if transferred to in its educaThrough manpower. Wi her and in the College mea them. But it is unfair to the more wo build manhood and womanthere will he two for every one tion than 60,000 hood as first our line and people living major now moving out of high school into of defense' against revolutionary in the Weber college area to force these tests all College. By accepted them to send their children to an and destructive ideology, reactionyouth will require education hejond LDS operated school, or pay the world and which isms conflicts ary tile high school lev. 1. threaten to destroy our American heavy financial penalties in sendThi.se facts raise many questions school sys- ing their children away to school, way of life. Our as to how they ran he piovnled tem has made thepublic of con- or have their children do without greatest hu h me tributions to the success of our nn education. It would be equally for, not the least of costs and ability of the state to ple, to the building of America peounfair to expect that our LDS and pay, tin tv pcs of school i to be the continuation of our way of life. people would receive kindly Buch piovuhd, the numb, r and quality Education is the producer and not in enforced choice were these of the teaching stalf and the total the roii.Miiiicr of wealth. schools to he operated by the Catholic Church or Borne other equipment need.' to turn our youth out from school fitted for vocationJl'NlOR COI I FGI :s ARK religious denomination. al employment and for suec. ssful t'L l.T I R I. FE.Yil.RS ONE PACKAGE DEAL UNFAIR living in our complex society. Th' iuiiinr colh ge, have beNo ono has given any answers nil oral ecu tei s of large Lumping the three junior colto these questions. The entire sub- come of Weber, Snow and Dixie n d hi", segments of our popcos at leges ject of closing out these colleges ulation V lur Follei;" serves an into one lot to be transferred to as part of our public plant was area of the LDS Church is unwise and unmine (liar 121,000 or decided in less than two hours at fair. Either nil three must be t 10 cent of the iy pel a Becret caucus. It was n learl by the state and transt'te, Ol time mere than 50,000 abandoned Harbor type of attack made withn mhi rs of the L. D. S. ferred or none. There may be good ii ate out any advance warning. No Finn !i In tin- 1952-5- , T school year and sufficient reason why one or chance was given for the people tins cii"i "o cMolled 4,717 people more of these schools should be to be heard, no thought given to in o i v.ii inns courses of whom turned over by the state but there whether these very schools would than moii 2,700 wore in evening is no possibility for each school to bo required to meet our present cl mi s and more than 1,000 were be judged on its own merits. and future needs for education. full time day students. Its contriCONSTITUTIONAL QUESTION butions to the educational advance MORE STUDY NEEDED. ami the enjoyment of a richer nu'iit Grave doubts have been raised This entire question should be life extended to more unnumbered competent legal authority given the most serious study by a thou. .amis through Weber, Morgan, by whether the law is constitutional properly constitut'd commission in Davis and Box Elder Counties on the grounds that the transfer order that some blue prints may through community concerts, lec given preference to one particular be drawn to handle the educational tures, community theatres, choir, religious body. If a majority of problem. Until such plans are made band and orchestral groups. The the voters next November fail to a to it is very dangerous step educational and cultural level of vote AGAINST- the law, the act propose that the state cut up and whole communities has been lifted will probably be tested in the get rid of so large a part of its courts. Pending the outcome of JUNIOR COLLEGES ARE college system. serious damage would b that test, These junior colleges with their VOCATIONAL CENTERS done to these colleges caused by on vocational courses emphasis The junior colleges have grown them being left in uncertain status short of four years of study, may into centers for training of both with neither the state nor the well become tne keystone of the and adult in vocational edu- church finally in control. youth will to the state meet plant require cation. State funds are used to REFER SUBJECT BACK FOR larger enrollment. The Commission on Higher Education appointed by support vocational schools at Irovo STUDY Salt Lake. What those schools the Iresident of the United States and to Weber are is their areas, College In the twenty-odd made a report in 1947 in which it years these held that the junior colleges, or to its area and to some extent schools have beer supported by Dixie and Snow are to the regions the state, they have grown to becommunity colleges or vocational serve. Here the great empha- come an accepted part of our pubthey schools, bv whatever name they sis is on for employment lic school system. They have grown may be called, offer the most pro- in those training those industries to become the heart centers of the Jobs, means of the mising meeting postwar surge for expansion of college which are established in the com- areas they serve providing educamunities. tion and culture which have lifted education. war the Weber During College the levels of large segments of our EDUCATION A TUBLIC trained thousands of people in people. RESPONSIBILITY Utah Is emerging into an indusspecial skills for jobs at the war The principle that education is plants in the Ogden area. It made trial state with new industries a state function operated by the a big contribution tc the war effort locating here, each industry requirpeople and for all the people re- as well as to the vocational ad- ing special skills in the manpower gardless of race or creed is deeply vancement of the people. For it employs, each needing someimbedded in our American tradi- many years it has conducted facility to training of its mantrain Sower. We here are developing a tions. Our pioneer forbearers and special courses for the great leaders of the L. D. S. ing in industries. economy which is placing Church who founded our Utah comThe farmer has his college at the the state in competition with its monwealth wrote into the state agriculture college, the business industrialized neighbors. We must constitution a requirement that ed- and professional man has his col keep it that way with our schools ucation must be an obligation of lege at the university. The college and public institutions advancing the state, free from sectarian con- of the laboring man, the skilled to serve our expanding empire. trol or domination. This tradition, artisan or tradesman is in the These facts, these considerations this constitutional mandate should junior colleges and in the voca- justify more than a two hour study not be so lightly handled that it tional schools. in a secret caucus behind closed can be thrown aside after only two doors for deciding the future of JUNIOR COLLEGES REDUCE hours deliberation by a small group education. The safe way, the of people. The twenty-odreasonable wav is to refer the BARRIERS TO EDUCATION years of money, labor and planning which Without increasing the costs to whole subject back to the legisAGAINST this went into the building of these the state, these junior colleges lature by voting colleges as part of our public make it possible to avoid heavy law. Let U3 plan the future of schools justifies more serious study. financial education carefully and well penalties which would be higher before taking any such drastic step Utah needs no such dictatorial imposed on chilin sending methods to deal with 13 educational dren away toparents school and they bring as planned by this law. system. The people are entitled two years of college and complete to some voice in dealing with their vocational courses within the reach I, LAMONT F. TORONTO, Secpublic affairs. of thousands who would not otherof State of the State of wise ho able to afford this educa- retary DO HEREBY CERTIFY JUNIOR COLLEGES Utah, d tion. Surveys show that nearly that the foregoing is a full, correct ECONOMICALLY SOUND more high school graduates copy of the argument What has happened to our state attend colleges in those communi- and true the transfer of Weber, against finances? The state found the ties where colleges are located and Snow and Dixie Junior Colleges, means of supporting and building the difference is largely accounted as filed by the Junior College these schools during all the depres- for among those in poorer families. Action Committee, as appears of sion years. Now with the income Under state control, these colleges record in office. my of our people eight times as great can have no barriers against any murt we cry prove! ty and bank- race, sect or creed but are held IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I ruptcy arid close out these col- open to all. hereunto set my hand and have ? lege JUNIOR COLLEGE TRANSFER affixed the Great Seal of the State In Utah we spent 50 times ns UNFAIR TO LDS CHURCH of Utah at Salt Lake City, this much for alcoholic b"vi rages nn.1 tobacco in 1952 as was spent by the If these colleges were to be main- 2Stb day of September, 1954. state for operating the four junic-- tained to present standards under LAMONT F. TORONTO colleges. For maintaining the state control of the LDS Church, then forma-tone- s would ri transfer them of Secretary of State any merely prison, juvenile courts, and correctional institutions, transfer the costs from all taxable (SEAL) i tithe-payin- g . l I S post-wa- pie-ben- non-LD- S vv m- - i o'i - - d . one-thir- r rs |