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Show eorial! Ir l r Univ?r:ity nf lJfh l.f h f.,112 fait WESTERN AMERICANA SALT LAKE VOLUME 17, NUMBER 95 Trade Discussed M lydcapest IVleefl SWINGING DOOR INJURY CLAIM DENIED WITH FINDINGS FOR DEFENDANT By Philip J. Till BUDAPEST from East and West, dealing iii goods ranging from soft drinks to razor blades,, discussed ways of bringing their products to both (UPI)-Busines- Plaintiff and Appellant, v. City of Provo, Utah, Defendant and Respondent (UPI)-Assem- bly Speaker Bob Moretti said Wednesday there is "some possibility" that the Assembly Criming Justice Committee would approve legislation restoring the death penalty in California. ' Moretti, a foe of capital punishment, said recently he foresaw little chance" the seven-membcommittee would approve such legislation - this session.. Four members are death penalty oper st tradd." to restore capital punishment in The conference was the sixth in as California. The Senate last, week many years organized by passed a Mil by Sen. George Deuk-mejia- Management Center Europe Beach, to im- (MCE), a Brussels-base- d consultant plement die voters will. organization. V But 'Moretti said the Democratic This years conference comes at members he talked to, whom he did a propitious moment in history, hot identify, obviously had read the the true breakthrough in results of the voters approval of marking trade and industrial cooperation Prop. . 17 and now they are ap- between East and West," one proaching it open mindedly." told several hundred The Deukmejian legislation would organizer mandate the death penalty for hired delegates. The object of die conference, assassins, torture slayers, mass officials said, was to integrate the ; killers and murderers, two-tim-e of or wit- officers police slayers . , . VJ ; , nt 8UPBEME COUBT OF THE UMTED STATES Syllabus i, BROWN CERTIORARI TO ' 5 No. ' U s l A , t UNITED STATES THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT Argued December 7, 1972 93. Decided April 17, 1973 Petitioners were convicted of transporting and conspiring to transport stolen goods in interstate commerce to their coconspirator, whose retail store was searched under a defective warrant while petitioners were in custody in another State. The charges against petitioners were limited to acts committed before the day of the search. At a pretrial hearing on petitioners motion to suppress evidence seized at the store, petitioners alleged no proprietary or possessory interest in the store or the goods, and the District Court denied their motion for lack of standing. At petitioners trial, the seized goods were introduced into evidence. In addition, police testimony as to statements by petitioners implicating each other were introduced into evidence in a manner contrary to Bruton v. United Ztates, 391 U. S. 123. The Court of Appeals concluded that the Bruton error was harmless in view of overwhelming independent proof of guilt and affirmed the District $ ; 71-61- ET AL. v. . Expert on Sleep i Favors Counting Sheep over Pills - DENVER (UPI) A medical researcher says insomniacs who take drugstore sleeping pills would be better off counting sheep. The more pills they take, he says, the less they sleep. Most of the sleeping p&ls on the market have almost no effect at all, t John Zimmerman, codirector of the Sleep Research Insitute of the University of Colorado Medidd Center, says the people o Fifth Avenue are very good hypnotists. They convince' people the pills give them a good night of sleep. Zimmerman says that sleeping pills would not a put person to sleep unless he thinks they will. Often they have a placebo effect. They have no effect in and of themselves." an .Insomniaca system .. After builds up a toleration for the pills, Zimmerman observes, "a persons sleep will actually be poorer and bf to leas' quality. It is take sleeping pills for insomnia earned by acute crises." The most common cause of losing sleep is acute crisis, such as injury, death or divorce. This is perfectly normal. Missing a night of - on on self-defeati- ng sleep never: hurt anybody, merman emphasis,. Zim- Courts ruling on standing. Held: 1. Petitioners had no standing to contest the admission of the evidence seized under the defective warrant since they alleged no legitimate expectation of privacy or interest of any kind in the premises searched or the goods seized; they had no automatic standing under Jones v. United States, 362 U. S. 257, as the case against them did not depend on poesession of the seized evidence at the time of the contested search and seizure; and they could not vicariously assert the personal Fourth Amendment right of the store owner in contesting admission of the seized goods. 4 i VI Pp. j 4-- 7. The testimony erroneously admitted was merely cumulative of other overwhelming and largely uncontroverted evidence properly before the jury, and the Bruton error was harmless. Pp. 9. 2. V , - 7-- ) . 1 ki Other firms present represented Wilkinson sword razor blades and. the Levi Strauss Company, best known in east Europe for blue jeans. Justice Douglas Western delegates began arriving a day or two before the conference, many of them looking very un- - Hits Records r 452 F. 2d 868, affirmed. Burger, C. J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court. Of AEC and TVA ( TOLEDO, OHIO (UPI) -Associate U.S. Supreme Court Justice William 0. Douglas has attacked what he termed the inexpert government of a number of Washington agencies, including the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) and the Atomic Energy' Commission (AEC). The TVA is the greatest strip miner in the United States, but it just has not developed any new sources of power," Douglas told some 3,000 persons at the University of Toledo here on Law Day. . He added that the AEC is a "good contender for an award as Public Enemy No. 1 for its irresponsible, proliferation of hazardous atomic plants." Douglas also said the energy crisis is an international problem that must be solved through a democracy. par-ticipato- ry Economic Periscope AlTfo Take Landlord-Tenan- Law At Up t Meeting - The PHILADELPHIA (ACCN) in a treatment first proposed restatement, of the law of landlord and tenant, will be discussed by members of The American LaW Institute at the Institute's 50th 1973, at Annual Meeting May The Mayflower in Washington, D.C. Tentative Draft No. 1, of the Restatement of the Law, Second, 15-1- 8, Property, covers: nature and landlord-tenaof duration ByLeeRuwttch Miami Review , businesslike, wearing open shirts and shorts as they strolled along the banks of the Dantfce River. Some arrived in time to watch the May Day workers' parade, held this year when temperatures hit 71 degrees, the hottest since the towns of Buda and Pest united as the Hungarian capital in 1873. But they donned their dark suits and neckties today, filled their briefcases and prepared for three days of selling their wares to a new expanding, market. nt THE U.S. HAS A COMPETITIVE advantage over the rest of the world in areas of high technology and farm products. Underdeveloped countries will become industrialized aind take over more of the labor intensive lines of manufacturing. The patterns of international trade and payments must be restructured so that the U.S. sells enough to cover the cost of what it buys. Hence, the U.S. must im-prove tie competitive position of its exports. But the fading competitiveness of U.S. producers is aggravated by .inflation and low productivity. i Foreign trade barriers against U.S. products and subsidized exports also place us at a disadvantage and create huge trade surpluses for .Japan and Germany. Now the U.S. relationship; formalities required for creation of landlord-tenan- t relationship; freedom to refuse to landlord-tenaInto enter relationship; and paramount title prevents contemplated use. A discussion dkaft also to be considered covers condition of nt leased property prevents con- and conduct of templated landlord or third person interferes with permissible use. The reporter for this project is Harvard University Law School jweld Professor A James Casner. Tentative drafts of A Model Land Development Code, a Model Code of Procedure, and the Federal Securities Code will also be submitted for discussion and consideration by ALI members. use, ; Pre-Arraignm-ent is and its trading partners must capacity, The economy surthe of the trade she overheating. negotiate Phase III is not working and plus. Artificial barriers must be ex Flexible removed. currency prices are escalating in anticipation i l Communist counterparts, got a R-Lo- ng first-degre- $ v Communist and capitalist markets. '' chance of a first-han- d look at the discussion under in. the markets Soviet 'bloc, Among subjects were cooperation in international Sdme firms represented were once marketing, new trade laws and ways banned and attacked by Communist to settle disputes. governments as symbols of Western businessmen, with little capitalist decadence such as Coca experience in dealing with their Cola and Wrigleys. n, ' ponents. But at a news conference, he disclosed that he had met Monday night with Democratic .. members e ami they told him they were looking aosne 'cases, the at the issue oped mindedly." v "be would penalty optional, He said they told him there As a subject to certain guidelines. For a possibility, a stronger possibility! murderer to be sent to the gas that a bill ' restoring the death chamber, a jury would have to find cirpenalty would be approved and sent there ws no . mitigating to the floor Where its. chances, for cumstances in the crime and die finl approval are virtually a defendant couM not be rehabilitated. Asked whether Democrats he foregone conclusion. I believe there is some possibility talked with would approve the Deuk-mejiaof a capital punishment biO passing proposal, Moretti replied that no specific piece of capital out," said Moretti. The voters last fall approved PUnishpuent ; legislation was overwhelmingly a ballot proposition ii con- sumers at a conference here. The meeting opened May 3, with an address by Samuel Pisar, considered by economics experts as the trade consultant, leading East-Weon "tfie new frontier of east-wes- t Death Penalty A Possibility, SACRAMENTO smen Communist and capitalist See details page 4. By Carl Ingrain THURSDAY, MAY 17. 1973 Eeasfl-Wes- fl Utah Supreme Court Decision Ralph D. Nance, CITY, UTAH American General Houston ' Insurance Co. shareholders approved an increase in authorised common to 45 million from 86 million.' The move paved the way for a proposed five for four stock split Union Oil Oo. of Lot Angeles California said it made another oil discovery in the Balikpapan 'Basin offshore Kalimantan, Indonesia. The well tested 8,400 barrels of 29 to 82 degree oil from three cones between 8,100 and 10,500 feet The company said other oil zones were logged but not tested. change values must bring payments into balance. THE CURRENT ECONOMIC boom is on fire. GNP is soaring and all forecasts are escalating. Before long the government will be forced to take some control action to reduce inflation. Otherwise a boom-bucycle is inevitable. Some restraint is overdue. Consumer spending is exuberant with instalment sales reaching hew highs. Production of st , of tougher controls or a freeze. Some 'commodities are already on an basis. Paper and chemicals are in extremely short allocation ; i suddIv. TIGHTER MONETARY and fiscal policies appear inevitable in order to curb the boom. Counterinflationary efforts are long over-lon- g due. However, Washington is more concerned about unemployment than inflation. When counter- business equipment is surging inflationary measures are finally higher and utilization of plant and '.used, it may trigger a equipment is approaching full cycle. boom-bu- st |