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Show ' Drtaent Scrlale Order 8H112 City ft VOLUME 17, NUMBER 265 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH - factor in administration today, and schools of education are ignoring it, James Kelly, an official of the Ford Foundation has told a Stanford conference. Addressing the closing session, January 26, of "Educational Administration in a Steady State" called by Education Prof. Lewis B. Mayhew, Kelly told more than 150 delegates from the profession: "Schools of education have largely ignored the current strong relationship between law and most important educational education, in especially its relationship to civil rights and minorities. "Lawyers should have had as i.uich time in schools of education in the last 20 years as the psychometrists have had," said Kelly, the foundation's program officer for education and research. "There is still too much ossification and rigidity," he said, noting that he was departing from a prepared speech after" having heard a day and a half of educational Needed for Impeachment "Most educators leave the Bill of Rights on the sidewalk outside the k school. We must all - A study by NEW YORK (UPI) the Association of the Bar of the City of New York says that Congress does not have to find a President guilty of a violation of criminal law in order to impeach him. "At the heart of the matter," the report declares, is the determination by Congress "that the officeholder has demonstrated by his actions that he is unfit to continue office." The report, entitled "The Law of Presidential Impeachment" and prepared by the Association's Committee on federal legislation, was filed January 26, in Washington re-thin- educational policies which are either restrictive or coercive." Educators, he urged, should ask themselves some questions "which are already on the horizon" : Should education be required? What is the rationale for compulsive mass education? If there is a need, should the government finance it? "My answer is yes," he added paren- thetically. Given a "yes" answer, Kelly told the conference, then a decision has to be made by administrators in the field on what to provide and how much of it. 'mmmmmmmmtmamm vv.il le Six-L- h 25-2- 7, Golden Eagle Hockey New " Last week was a week as far as the Golden Eagles were "streak-snapping- concerned. As examples, Friday enables the night's loss to Seattle, e Totems to snap their losing 4-- 3, six-gam- streak. Saturday evening the Eagles had unbeaten string in their own Denver snapped, a run that included 8 victories (including two in last season's playoffs and three this d season) and one tic, as the Spurs the Eagles, And, Sunday night, the Salt Lake sextet rebounded in Portland to cop an out-score- 7-- 6. important 6-- 2 victory from the Buckaroos, thus snapping the Bucks' 18 game unbeaten string on home ice, defeat since late their first home-ic- e October. Heading into this week's action, the Golden Eagles find themselves in sole eight points possession of third-placg San Diego and behind just one point behind second-plac- e d Phoenix with three on -- e, league-leadin- games-in-han- the Roadrunners. Thursday the Eagles host the Buckaroos at the Salt Palace. The last time the "Big Ped Machine" came here they skated off with a 6 victory over the Egles. Since then the clubs met twice in Portland, with a ll tie nd Salt Lake's 2 win resulting. Saturday the Eagles will entertain the Seattle Totems again, hoping to reverse last Friday's 3 loss to the Totes. And Sunday the Eagles visit San Diego, the start of a lengthy "series" to find the Eagles and Gulls tangling a total of eight times within a span of 15 games in five weeks. 7-- constitutional provisions on im- peachment, the report discusses the precedents and procedures of Congress in conducting impeachment proceedings. It makes no attempt to apply its finding to charges against President Nixon. Impeachment provisions were devised by the founding fathers to enable Congress to remove a President for serious misconduct without waiting for the next election. The Constitutional phrase of - ARABS BUYING GOLD TO PAY ARMS COSTS NEW YORK As expected, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) experts' meeting in Rome last week agreed that gold should be eliminated as the world's money standard. They gave as their reason the weakening of the currency market value of the leading industrial nations as a result of the skyrocketing Arab oil prices in the past few months. It added an extra $50 billion (B) to the. import bills of the leading nations. But, as previously exclusived in these columns, the idea to drop gold as a world money standard has been pressured by the UJS. Treasury for many months. The latest IMF move means Washington is winnLg it way. .' Also, as previously (xclusived In these columns, the IMF experts admitted in Roue that the world monetary reform planned to be ironed put next July 31 will' not be realized. Washington is still pushing for regulated "floating jcurrehcy values; , But knowledgeable money metal circles say all of the above doesn't mean that told Is dead. They say it is a classical metal of value in international trade and will so continue because it is always scarce in supply. Those money metal experts predict that though the present the $200ri-ounc- e price for gold may run into speculative profit-takinprice is likely Just over the horizon. And its price future might soar to $500 an ounce because demand is growing faster than supply. g, Arabs have Money metal traders say it's certain the h been buying gold. Reason : The Soviet Union has ordered the Arab natidhs to pay in gold or U.S. dollars for: the military supplies shipped for the latest war against Israel. The trustworthy international trade winds say the Soviets are in need of hard money with which to pay its bills for goods and services purchased from countries. Moscow believes this will establish a firm credit recognition for hear oil-ric- . ist , government. 2-a- 6-- 4-- impeachment. After explaining and interpreting the history and meaning of the integrity of government." Impeachment acts include corruption or flagrant abuse of power; those acts that undermine public confidence in officials; "abuse or violation of some public trust," as Hamilton put it. or, in Madison's words, ii a President allows his appointees "to perpetrate with impunity high crimes or misdemeanors against the United States or neglects to superintend their conduct, so as to check their excesses." Impeachment should not be treated as a partisan political weapon. The committee said "we em- phatically disagree" with the "casual view" put forth by and now Vice President Gerald Ford that "an impeachable offense is whatever a majority of the House considers it an to be . ." . Supplemental Order Issued to Mountain Fuel on." National Conference on Law Office Economics and Management, Aprl in San Francisco at the Fairmont Hotel, with the House ad hoc committee on "high crimes and misdemeanors" as grounds for impeachment was lifted bodily out of English impeachment law. It does not refer to acts that are necessarily criminal, but to those "which undermine the problem discussion. "Classification of kids by age, by class, by IQ, and by race still goes Technology in Law Offices CHICAGO - Use of technology in the theme of the hw offices THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1974 Bar Report Says No Crime Teachers Told Their Training Misses on Law Federal STANFORD (ACCN) court decisions are probably the "MERICANA" The government-owne- d Soviet Union banks in. all major' capitals of Europe have highly respected expert on their staffs engaged in foreign currency speculation. That's no secret, in world banks and corporations doing the same thing. . Factually, the Soviet currency and money metal traders are highly sophisticated in their bargaining ability and could qualify g for Jobs in the big banks of any capitalistic country.. high-payin- f, SALT LAKE CITY Mountain Fuel Supply Company stated Wednesday that the Utah Public Service Commission's action of issuing a Supplemental Order on January 21, 1974, which rescinded and vacated that portion of its January 14, 1974, rate in-- , crease Report and Order pertaining to the inclusion of the Company's oil operations in its utility accounts "was constitutionally and statutorily sanctioned in all respects .. ." 'The statement was set forth in an answer the Company filed with the Commission dealing with various motions previously filed with the Commission on January 25 by the Utah Welfare Rights Organization. Mountain Fuel also stated that none of the motions of the Utah Welfare Rights Organization "demonstrates any prejudice to their interests as a result of the Supplemental Order of January 21, 1974." On the same day the motions of the Utah Welfare Rights Organization were filed, the Utah Public Service Commission issued an order acknowledging receipt of the motions and settimg them for hearing and argument at the Commission's hearing room on February 4. ' In its answer to the motions filed by the Welfare Utah Rights Organization, Mountain Fuel also claimed: by the Company and that it did not object thereto. Nor was the Company opposed to the motion made by the Utah Welfare Rights Organization that all written, oral or other forms of ex parte communication with the Commission be disclosed, and in fact concurred in the motion. However, Mountain Fuel termed as "impertinent and wholly unfounded" Welfare Utah that Rights Organization's allegation than an immediate hearing is required so that "public trust and confidence" in the Commission may be restored. ". . . the 'public trust and confidence' in the Commission has never been and is not now an issue," the answer continued. 'The issue is the legality of the Supplemental Order of January 21, 1974. This issue may be explored, in further proceedings on rehearing as defined by Statute and the Rules of the Commission." The answer pointd out that "the is replete with record of this care Commission efforts to give all parties time and an opportunity to be heard." ... Provo Station Receives Citation KBYU-TV- , operated by Brigham Young University at Provo, Utuh. has been cited for its cooperation with the Wage-Hou- r Division, the U.S. Department of Labor announced today. Awarded on behalf of Secretary of Labor Peter J. Brennan, and June H. Wakeford, Assistant Regional DirecState statutes. tor for Employment Standards in due That the process and equal Denver, the citation was given in protection guarantees of the Conrecognition of the contribution of stitution are not transgressed in a KBYU "to public awareness of the hearing procedure so long as an rights and obligations of workers and aggrieved party has an opportunity to employers under the Federal statutes be heard whether by way of an original for which this administration is hearing, rehearing, further hearing, or responsible." other procedure to review the ComDivision is involved The Wage-Hou- r mission action. in informing the working public of its That the Utah Welfare Rights rights under minimum wage and overOrganization has its remedies at hand time pay laws, and other laws prohibitthrough its Application for Rehearing ing discrimination in hiring on the filed on January 25. basis of age or sex. Mountain Fuel noted that some of The certificate was presented to the supplemental proceedings held by KBYU's general manager, Bruce L. the Commission in the present matter Christensen, by Jesse Davis, acting were without notice to or attendance area director in Salt Lake City. That the emergency measures taken by the Utah PSC in issuing its Supplemental Order of January 21, and 1974, are constitutionally statutorily sanctioned. That the Supplemental Order was in compliance with, not in violation of, |