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Ukiah Daily Journal from Ukiah, California • Page 8

Location:
Ukiah, California
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8 TUESDAY, DEC. 4, 1990 UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL- STUDENTS OF THE MONTH Potter Valley Students of the month honored In October from Potter Valley Junior and Senior High School are (Junior high) Wai Van Leaman and Akasha Barrlckman and (senior high) Eric Smith, Ruby Clark and Vanessa Meunlot. College emphasis should be on teaching: report -THE UKIAH DAILY JOURNAL- DEC. 4, 1990 9 NEW YORK (AP) Colleges are shortchanging students and faculty alike by prizing professors' research far more than their teaching or their social commitment, a report says. "Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate," released Sunday by the Carnegie Endowment for the Advancement of Teaching, takes academia to task for shunning involvement in solving problems outside the ivory tower.

"What we urgently need today is a more inclusive view of what it means to be a recognition that knowledge is acquired through research, through synthesis, through practice and through teaching," said the study by foundation president Ernest L. Boyer. The report called on college officials to base tenure decisions on teaching skills and community involvement as well as scholarly publications. And it urged campuses to include the views of past and present students in evaluating professors for tenure or promotions. "In the current climate, students all too often are the losers," said the report.

"In glossy brochures, they're assured that teaching is important, that a spirit of community pervades the campus, and that general education is the core of the undergraduate experience. "But the reality is that, on far too many campuses, teaching is not well rewarded, and faculty who spend too much time counseling and advising students may diminish their prospects for tenure and promotion." "Good teaching is assumed, not rewarded," said a math professor quoted anonymously in the report. "The administrators and many faculty don't regard extra time spent with students as time well spent. This is the most frustrating aspect of my work." HUBBARD SODA 6PACKCAN. OZ.

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9 A.Mb P.M. Higher rates for California water districts and ag users upheld WASHINGTON (AP) Water districts and agricultural water users in California's Central arid Solano Valleys lost their Supreme Court attack on a law raising the costs of water from federal sources. The court, over two dissenting votes Monday, left intact rulings that said the cost restructuring caused by the Reclamation Reform Act of 1982 did not interfere unlawfully with existing contracts. Justices Byron R. White and Thurgood Marshall voted to hear arguments in the case, but the votes of four of the nine justices are needed to grant such review.

Each of the water districts involved entered into a longterm contract with the Department of Interior's Bureau of Reclamation before 1982. The contracts call for the districts to receive water from two vast systems of federally owned and operated reservoirs, dams and canals. Although each water district was charged a different rate, all the contract rates represent a significant government subsidy. In exchange, the districts agreed to distribute die water to all eligible lands within their jurisdictions. The only specific eligibility requirement was that no water could be provided to any farm in excess of 160 acres unless the land was leased and not farmed by its owners.

The 1982 law increased the acreage limitation to 960 acres and closed the leasing loophole by making the limitation apply to leased and owned land alike. One provision in the law required the water districts to amend their contracts to conform with the eligibility rules. If the districts chose not to amend their contracts, they had to pay the "full cost" of delivering water to leased lands in excess of 160 acres. The lawsuit filed by the water districts and individual water users contended that the provision, because it forced changes in existing contracts, violated due-process rights and represented an unconstitutional "taking" without just compensation. U.S.

District Judge Raul Ramirez ruled for the Interior Department, throwing out the lawsuit. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld that dismissal last March. The appeals court said the Constitution does not prevent Congress "from limiting the volume of subsidized water that the water districts can deliver to leased lands under their pre-existing contracts with the Bureau of Reclamation." In the appeal acted on Monday, lawyers for the water districts and water users argued that the 9th Circuit court ruling "has allowed the United States to unilaterally abrogate the water-service contracts of (the) water districts." Bush administration lawyers urged the justices to reject the appeal, contending that the case involves "the scope of a subsidy enjoyed by a discrete number of geographically concentrated agricultural entities" and does not "raise an issue of national importance." Court strengthens right of criminal suspects WASHINGTON (AP) The Supreme Court Monday strengthened the right of criminal suspects to have lawyers present when they are questioned by police. By a 6-2 vote, the justices overturned the murder conviction of Mississippi death row inmate Robert S.

Minnick, who confessed when he was questioned without his lawyer present. The court said Minnick's rights were violated even though he earlier had consulted with his lawyer and agreed to talk to authorities. Unless the suspect initiates such a talk with police, the court said, he may not be questioned outside the presence of his lawyer once he has invoked his right to a lawyer. In other action, the court: Left intact a lawsuit settlement that eased restrictions on abortion clinics in Illinois. The court, without comment, 'Since (he) made a specific request for counsel before the interview, the was Justice Kennedy rejected an appeal by two nurses and two expectant fathers who said the settlement does not adequately protect women or fetuses.

Refused to kill a lawsuit against a California community college's officials accused of unlawful censorship for blocking the on-campus performance of a racially charged play. The court, without comment, rejected an appeal by the college officials. Shielded businesses from some big-money lawsuits filed by employees who claim they were fired so their employers would not have to pay pension benefits. The court ruled unanimously that fired employees may not sue in state courts over such allegations. The state suits are pre-empted by a federal law protecting pensions, the court said.

In the confessions case, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy said, "There can be no doubt that the interrogation in question was initiated by the police. It was a formal interview which (Minnick) was compelled to attend." "Since (Minnick) made a specific request for counsel before the interview, the police-initiated interrogation was impermissible." We Accept Food Stamps Money Stamps Available BIG 9UPER BONNIEHUBBARD COFFEE CREAMER 22 OZ. 1.29 MJB COFFEE (PREMIUM DECAFF 26 OZ. $5.29) 26 OZ.

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About Ukiah Daily Journal Archive

Pages Available:
310,258
Years Available:
1890-2009