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Show Page 6 THE UTAH INDEPENDENT February 25, 1971 CAMPU MORE " NJa BILLS iWtutt itfiil H.'fabw&id oulluA aumpus!" (Continued from page 5) At last wc arc beginning to hear it. ami its about of the Christinu Erwin 1). Cunham. Fditor-in-Chi- If they cannot institute their programs one way they do it another. They have been trying for years to get Metropolitan Government without success. Therefore, they tried to do it piecemeal by consolidating city and county first in services and then in governy ment. The Salt Lake I Iealth Department consolidation is one example. Now, since the people rejected Metro government at the polls they are trying to institute it a step at a time by disrupting the current order of the State Constitution and allow- cl tian Science Monitor, recently wrote a nationally syndicated article praising the intestinal fortitude of these few hut growing number of university administrators who will have no truck with revolutionaries. These are presidents and chancellors of universities who are determined to treat campus rioters as criminals rather than coddle them just because they are students or faculty members. This is something for which parents ami have been desperately and impatiently waiting. To them, it has been totally incomprehensible to see men n dollar educational instituat the head of tions playing the role of Casper Milquetoast while mobs burned, bombed and vandalized their schools, kidnaped their officers, illegally occupied public buildings and intimidated or paralyzed the entire educational process. Perhaps the reason some of these firmer administra tive voices have not been heard earlier is due to thp elected to strike first at the fact that the side of the nations educational stnic-torsoft, under-bell- v They carefully cased the various campuses and knew exactly where they had sympathizers, or weak administrators running universities. So that is where they struck first. However, as the rash of campus disorders spread, they eventually ran into the academic bailiwicks of several much more d men who were not about to surrender their campuses to any mob of fanatical insurgents. City-Count- tax-paye- rs multi-millio- ing this piece of legislation to go through to change it under the guise of local control. We urge the Legislature to refuse passage of this bill and others like it. SB 108 INCOME TAX INCREASE (Harward and Pugh) A bill to raise the income tax by ' riot-planne- rs e. - fellow-traveler- per cent for single individuals and one per cent for husbands and wives whether one-ha- lf tough-minde- filing separately or jointly. This one is 82 pages long, therefore, it is expected that not many legislators will read it. It will probably HOWARD be debated the last day and the legislators will be pressured to vote for it. We urge them to hold fast and keep a level head and vote it down. STATE RETIRESB 131 UNIVERSITY One of these was President James M. Nabrit, Jr.. president of the nations largest predominantly Negro college, Howard University, in Washington, D.C. When a group appeared on the campus calling it themselves Students for Academic Freedom. Dr. noted that some of the faculty joined in. Soon they began demonstrating on campus with demands for the suspension of many fundamental regulations governing the conduct of both students and faculty. They also demanded the nlxilition of military training at the university. When no administrative action was taken, in response to these demands there began to Xa-hr- - MENT (Pugh and Dean) Among other things, this bill would add a governors pension to the state retirement act. We are opposed to elected officials having on page 12) retire-(Continu- by ed W. Cleon Skousen Reprinted from Law and Order Magazine For The Finest In Pets And Pet Supplies Dogs-CatsBirds-Tropi- Fish cal -- Aquarium Supplies-Complet- e Line Of Pet Supplies ?IT CORRA4 131 E. 3rd So., S.L.C. Ph. 364-193- 1 & OfC AN OPEN MEETING Presented V By Weight Control Institute (A Psychological organization for the treatment and study of overweight problems) Why Can't I Lose Weight?" A discussion by the trained staff of Weight Control Institute along with a question and answer period. Phone FREE ADMISSION 3 p.m Tuesday, February 23 BEATRICE'S SELECTED VALLEY FOODS Elliott Hall 569 S. 13th East Salt Lake City, Utah 3530 South Redwood Road 322-585- 6 s, for space reservations Salt Lake City, Utah 841 19 Phone 299-304- 1 |