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Show Serialu Ord3P Dam,.. 1KERN University of Utah Salt Loke'city, Utah 80112 AMERICAN h i $ A. 0 3 VOLUME 15, NUMBER 116 SALT LAKE .CITY, UTAH Supreme Court Decisions Order Atlanta To Comply With Statements Capsule School Rulings Filed Incorrectly First In Series Financing - H. R. Hinton, The 5th NEW ORLEANS (UPI) of U.S. Circuit Court Appeals has directed the city of Atlanta to draw THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1971 Deputy Secretary of State indicated their office is plagued by incorrect filing of financing statements. Under the new tg a new pupil assignment plan law (House Bill No. 332) Utah complying with the latest U.S. which amends .a Section of the Supreme Court school desegregation Uniform Commercial Code, the fia decision which could nancing statements must show rulings busing. whether the secured party IS or IS require massive cross-tow- n e Circuit Court ruling The NOT a seller or purchase money threw out Atlantas current plan and lender of the collateral. IF the seordered the school board to submit a cured party is either of these . . . new (me that would meet principles he must check - the appropriate established in the landmark case of block provided on the form. In adg dition, if he IS NOT a seller or . Swann v. That April 20 U.S. Supreme Court purchase money lender of the collateral he must also complete No. decision, written by Chief Justice 6 on the standard form for filings. Warren Burger, upheld a federal Unless forms are completed propdistrict judges order directing the will be returned. Charlotte-Mecklenbur- g board of erly they A summary of House Bill 332 education in North Carolina to bus has been compiled by H. Wright students to achieve a racial balance General in each school in the district Volker, Assistant Attorney as follows: equivalent to the systems racial House Bill No. 332 amends Secmakeup as a whole. 2 of the Uniform tion The 5th Circuits June 10 ruling Commercial Code relating to the ordered the Atlanta school board to filing of security interests by addfollow the principles set down in the ing a provision that the financing Swann case insofar as they related statement shall contain (a) a stateto facts in the Atlanta case. ment that the secured party is not But it specified the plan must a seller or purchase moneylender include the provisions of that of the collateral covered by the to a majority to statement; or (b) if the secured relative opinion minority pupil transfer option party is a seller or purchase of the collateral covproviding for free transportation money-lendered by the financing statement; and space availability to the transa statement of the gross amount ferring student. of the sales in dollars; the School officials and attorneys amount of price or use taxes sales any refused to speculate exactly what in connection with the sale, paid effect that would have on the citys and the state or states to which school system, in which 70 per cent such taxes were paid. of all students are black and 30 per See sample of standard form cent are white. used for filing financing stateMany of the students attend one-rac-e ments on back page of this issue. schools a fact admitted by the school board in a recent memorandum to the 5th Circuit because of the citys housing pattern. Most Blacks live on the south side, most whites on the north side. The 5th circuit ruling signed by of New Wisdom Minor John Judges Homer Orleans, Thornberry of NEW YORK (ACCN) Deposit Clark of Charles and Austin, Tex., flows at the nation's mutual savings also the Miss. Jackson, requires banks continued at record levels in school board to file semi-annuto a preliminary reports during the school year on its May, according released here by the National progress toward compliance with report of Mutual Savings Association the court order. U. LAW GRADUATES: WHERE DID THEY GO? a ; one-pag- GRAND LARCENCY Trial Court: Convicted and Sentenced to an indeterminate term. Supreme Court: Affirmed STATE OF UTAH Plaintiff and Respondent, v. GARY FRED WINGER, Defendant and Appellant. Plaintiff Counsel: Vernon B. Romney Lauren N. Beasley Defendant Counsel: Philip C. Pugsley PAGE THREE 70A-9-40- Veteran Death Row Inmate Back In Cell er - TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) Edgar has been returned to the state prison, where he has spent 14 years on death row. He was brought back to his deatn row cell after losing an appeal to go free on bail to await a new trial for H. Smith murder. Smith, 37, had faced execution longer than anyone in the nation until a Federal Judge last May 13 overturned his conviction and ordered a new trial. Smith was taken from the Federal House of Detention, June 10, after his bail plea was denied, and was brought here, manacled to another prisoner. He joked with newsmen. If you want to come with me, come on," the strapping told photographers. Asked if Smith would be returned to his cold cell near the electric chair, Warden Howard Yeager said, Thats where he came from, thats where hell go. On June 9, three judges from the Third U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia dismissed a ruling of a Federal Judge in Newark that Smith could be freed on $5,000 bond. The State argued there was no ex-Mari-ne had Smith been evidence rehabilitated. It , said he should remain jailed and in State custody while the new trial order is appealed. William F. Buckley, the columnist, who has befriended Smith and acted as his financial adviser, was ready to post bail and have the innate appear on his television xogram. The Federal Appeals Court the States appeal of the new trial order be heard the week of July or-Jer- ed 12. Since entering the state prison June 6, 1957, Smith has written two books and numerous magazine articles. He also wrote many of his his in19 appeals maintaining nocence of the March, 1957, murder of Victoria Zielinski. A new trial was ordered when a statements ruled unsigned judge Smith made to police had been coerced in 20 hours of questioning. Stolen Cards JOHNSON, Orlando J. Walker Bankard Charlotte-Mecklenbur- . Mutual Banks' Deposit Stay At High Level - al Suggest Paying Turks Not To Grow Poppies - A WASHINGTON (UPI) of New York State delegation legislators has outlined a plan under which a private agency, funded by the state, would pay Turkish farmers not to grow opium poppy plants. The plan was outlined in an hour-lon- g meeting, June 10 between the legislators and Turkish Ambassador Melih Esenbel. however, told the that the matter could not legislators be handled privately and was an issue for the two countries federal governments. Esenbel, New York City is dying from a heroin epidemic, Republican State Senator John Hughes of Syracuse and leader of the delegation told the ambassador. He added that analysis of the heroin suggests that 80 per cent of it comes from opium illegally grown and exported from Turkey. The legislators asked for the meeting with the ambassador as another step in their campaign to draw attention to the drug crisis in New York and to point up what they consider inadequate action on the matter from both the Turkish and U.S. government. Banks. Net deposit inflows at mutual savings banks in May 1971 totaled a record $680 million, surpassing by far the industrys previous net new money high for the month, which was $393 million in May 1967. In May one year ago, savings banks recorded a net deposit inflow of $224 million. After the addition of an estimated million of interest to depositors accounts last month, the total industry deposit gain for May 1971 reached $800 million, well above both May 1967's high of $439 million, and the $326 million gain in total $120 industry deposits experienced during May one year ago. At the end of May 1971, total deposits at mutual savings banks were an estimated $76.6 billion, while total assets were $84.7 billion, NAMSB said. John P. Ashton John P. Ashton received his B.A. degree from Stanford University. He served as a member of the University Judicial Council, Chairman of the Council and Assistant Editor of the Utah Lawr Review. Awarded the Bernard J. Stewart Memorial Scholarship. Although he preferred a general practice in the West with business emphasis he moved to Washington, D.C., as a staff member of the Civil Rights Division in the Justice Department. Inter-Fraterni- Kenneth G. Anderton Kenneth G. Anderton affiliates with Beaslin, Nygaard, Coke & Vincent. Mr. Anderton received a B.A. and M.A. from Utah State University prior to graduating from University of Utah Law School. He was Senior Class President, and Blue Key National Honorary Fra-- , ty temity Items For Red China Trade -PWASHINGTON (UPI) resident Nixon, in an effort to rebuild contacts with Mainland China that were ruptured more than 20 years ago, has authorized U.S. businessmen to export to the Peking-Hel- a mainland a long list of goods ranging from wheat to roadbuilding equipment. The June 10 action ends a virtual embargo on trade with Red China, imposed shortly after the Communists took over in 1949. Items that may be sold freely to Red China without specific approval include most farm, fish and forestry products; tobacco; fertilizers; coal; chemicals, including fertilizer; rubber and textiles; some metals; agricultural, industrial and office equipment; household appliances; some electrical appliances; automobiles; consumer goods; roadbuilding equipment, and some relative unsophisticated computers. In addition, the President said, items not on the freely exportable list may be shipped provided they are approved by the commerce basis. department on a The step was a major one in Nixon's campaign to restore some relations with Communist China. It has less commercial significance, because all exports to Red China in 1969, the last year for which figures are available, totaled the equivalent of only $1.3 billion about two weeks of average U.S. case-by-ca- se ist exports. The President, in putting wheat, flour, and other grains on the unrestricted list, also lifted controls on the exports of those products to the Soviet Union and Eastern - Execu- NEW YORK (ACCN) tives of a New York State watchdog commission June 14 charged that the states four manpower training programs have proliferated to the point where the division oi responsibility has brought on serious problems of overlapping and duplication, and often competition for the same clientele. When President John F. Kennedy authorized wheat shipments to the Soviet Union in the early 1960s, he imposed special requirements that each sale be approved by the commerce department and at least half of the shipments be in vessels. These are the restrictions that Nixon revoked. In addition to freeing some export restrictions, Nixon also authorized all imports from China to enter the United States under the same tariff and quota restrictions that apply goods from most Communist U.S.-own- countries. Steven W. Allred Steven W. Allred joined the law firm of Roe, Fowler, Jerman and Dart at 340 East 4th South, Salt Lake City. Mr. Allred received a Bachelor of Science Degree from the University of Utah before graduating from law schol this year. He is 23 years old and single. Israeli Law Scholar Will Teach at NYU NEW YORK (ACCN) Yaron, dean of the Law Jerusalem and a University - Hebrew Reuben Faculty world-renown- in ed papyrologist, will inaugurate an exchange program between his law school and the School of Law at New York University this fall. Dean Yaron possesses an international reputation in the fields of Roman Law and Jurisprudence and there can be no more auspicious beginning for this part of the exchange program than his presence here as the visiting professor from Hebrew University, announced Howard Greenberger, associate dean of NYUs School of Law. n for his Dean Yaron is studies of the ancient tablets containing the laws of the Old Babylonian kingdom of Eshnunna, which were discovered in 1945 and at Tell 1947 during excavations Harmal, an outskirt of Baghdad. He is author of the book The Laws of Eshnunna and also of The Law of the Aramaic Papyri. well-know- Europe. Charge Overlap In Job Training Vice-Preside- Anderton also served on the Teaching Effectiveness Committee and a recipient of the Abe Lincoln. Land Grant Centennial Scholarship. He is 33 years old and married. ed As visiting professor at NYUs School of Law, he will teach seminars in Roman Law and Ancient Near Eastern Law, including Babylonian Law and the Law of the Bible. |