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Show 1971 Page 10 THE UTAH INDEPENDENT February 25, O SENATORS NOT Continued from page 7 CONCERNED ular support of these standards there is no need for extensive enforcement. among the students is such that Mr. Canham says a genuine spirit of permissiveness is engendered between faculty, students and administration. President Wilkinson has endeavored to prevent propagandists from confusing the students on basic issues. The studentbody is proud of its Air Force and Army ROTC units on campus. They are two of the 5 largest in the nation. Twice a day, at 8 A.M. and P.M., students all across the campus stand at attention for one minute as the flag is raised or lowered and the national anthem is played over the universiSelf-contr- ol In rebuttal to - a question of constitutionality of Senate Bill No. 133, which would give the State Board of Education control over private schools, Senator Barnett, Chairman of the Senate Education Committee said, This committee is not concerned with the constitutionality of the bill that is left up to the courts. This remark was made at a tense and emotional Senate Education Committee meeting held in the Senate chambers Friday, February 19 th. As a result of the opposition expressed at the meeting, the committee tabled the bill and adopted a resolution to be presented before the Senate that a study be made during the next two years by the Legislative Council in the hopes that some kind of legislation regulating private schools can be agreed upon. Mrs. Anna Lou Jeffs, proprietor of Car den Wasatch private school, speaking in opposition to the bill, stated that the standards of education at her school were equal or superior to those of the public schools and that her students were learning to read and write, which the' werent learning in the public schools. Admitting that there were some private schools that may be guilty of improper practices, she challenged the public schools to prove that they were any different. Reverend Joseph T. Fitzgerald, director of education of the Catholic Schools in Utah, also speaking in opposition to the bill, said, we feel that the handing over to the State Board of Education of the power to make and enforce rules and regulations for the private schools covered by this act is lic transferring the control of schools from the private to the public sector, while leaving the financial burden of private education where it is at present. tys wide-rangin- amplifiers. g As Paul A UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT SPEAKS OUT Dr. Ernest L. Wilkinson cainc to BYU as a lawyer of national repute. At the beginning of each school year he addresses a convocation of the entire studentbodv in the fieldhouse. During his speech he assures loth faculty' and students that forums for free discussion will be provided on every dimension of campus life. He reminds them, however, that all expressions of conviction, regardless of their intensity or importance, must be confined to Tough-minde- d orderly and peaceful procedures. He then invites the students to express their committment to a strict policy of maintaining law and order on the campus of BYU. There is always a noisy acclamation as the students come to their feet with a great round of applause. There is another acclamation when he an Jamie ONE WAY TO RUN A UNIVERSITY President Wilkinson also has some strong ideas about the way a university should be run. He says: Contrary to the practice of so many universities and colleges today, the president of a university should he and employed by and be responsible to the trustees not by and to the faculty. Of course, good judgement of the requires that he give consideration to the views Income tax Prepared While you wait for as little as $ 2.50 Come see us for best service & Painting HEARING AIDS All Kinds and All Makes Automotive Repair Painting & DEVELOPED ESPECIALLY FOR NERVE DEAFNESS Body Work Write For Free Replica of Beltone's New All in the Ear Presto Model VW & Corvair Specialists Non-Operati- non-pub- (Continued on P. 3310 W. 3500 S. . ng Beltone Salt Lake City, Utah Ph. 467-252- 2 Mechanical Jim Body, Fender sion. 3054 So. State Sheet iVletal Co. Inc. Mgr. - CAMPBELL TAX SERVICE Brower's Motor Ed nounces that any student found disrupting the good order of the university will be promptly replaced by one of the thousands of students who wanted to coipc to BYU but could not be previously accommodated. President Wilkinson leaves no doubt as to how he feels about students or faculty who think violent protest is the way to solve social problems. He states bluntlv: No person should be toddled on the campus and we should not made the campus a sanctuary or them. asylum where officers of the law cannot get to The moment they engage in unlawful acts, they- are like other citizens, subject to police action without students and warning. We make it very' clear to our faculty that anyone participating in civil disturbances will be automatically subject to immediate expul- de- Haney scribed it. BYU is one place where the spirit of traditional Americanism is still completely in style. & o 317 So. Main Salt Lake City. Utah 841 1 1 298-091- 0 328-988- 1 11) n tor mm. Rataln tho valuable nutrtants lost through other milling methods. Use the wtteet you now have stored end save money while enjoying better tasting, more nutritious food. WhMt Buy A LIMITED NUMBER OF NEW MEMBERSHIPS NOW BEING ACCEPTED an All Grain Stone Grinding Flour Mill Today o Immediate Delivery Also available: use or storage. 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