OCR Text |
Show Sorials Order Department University of Utah City C4112 SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH VOLUME 17, NUMBER 220 Industry at 86 In October NEW YORK NEW capacity, The of operating rate U.S. industry held steady in October for the third straight month at 86 per cent of estimates. The manufacturing sector operated at 86.5 per cent in October, level with September and 2.5 points higher than last year, the firm said. Durable goods industries were running at 85.5 per cent, a gain of 0.5 point over the previous month and 5 points above a year ago. Nondurable goods production dropped 0.5 from September to 88 per cent and remained unchanged from Legal Inbook by Attorney sight, a H. Newcomb Morse on court (ACCN) ge affecting paid and volunteer fire officers and fire fighters, has just been published by the National conOctober 1972, McGraw-Hil- l tinued. The mining industry lost 2 points between September and October with each segment adding to the loss of capacity, the firm reported. Utilities operated at 80 per cent in October, an advance of 0.5 point' over September and 1.5 points over Fire Protection Association (NFPA). Reviewing in laymens language 60 legal cases pertaining to incidents on the fire ground as well as in normal fire department functions, Morse offers practical legal guidance for fire chiefs and officers, labor union representatives, city and town counselors and other last year. admunicipal attorneys, science and fire ministrations, Administrative Problems; sonnel Problems; and Vehicle - author also suggests sources of useful legal data highly important to lawyers handling cases similar to those he reveiws. The only book of its kind grouping recorded court decisions on fire d 6 by service laws, this volume is' a compilation of reprints and preprints of the Legal Insight column Morse writes for the NFPA monthly periodical Fire Command! Editor of the magazine and author of the preface to the new book is Paul R. Lyons of the NFPA 2-- ch punishment unless' a statute prescribes a penalty so out of proportion to the offense as to violate the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. The appellate court acted in the case of Soledad inmate Dorian C. Jones, 25, who pleaded guilty on two counts of selling marijuana in Los Altos to an undercover officer in June, 1972. Jones was sentenced to five years to life. Justice Harold Brown, in a minority decision, said the penalty was not compatible with the laws of staff. Legal Insight are now ) available at $3.25 each from the Service NFPA Publications 470 Atlantic Ave., Department, Boston, Mass 02210. A 25 per cent discount applies to orders for 25 or more copies. (Catalog No. : transadult. If youre trying to figure out why the younger generation has adopted this stage in the overall life cycle, here are some factors which contribute to this new phenomenon: ' SPP-20- Elderly Woman Died 'Poor' but Left Fortune period of change. In other words, these are young adults who have passed through the MIAMI BEACH intermediate stage known as securities, House to Probe S8A Dealings are minimized and personal most other states and that past unsupported emotional accusations concerning the subject have now been exposed as false. He said recent studies dispell the notion marijuana use leads to the commission of crimes and that there was little basis in the idea marijuana leads to the use of other - subcommittee has begun public hearings on charges of corrupt loan activity in the Small Business Administration (SBA) and possible connections with the Nixon Ad- ministration. Initial witnesses before the small business subcommittee will be asked about loan practices in the. Richmond, Va., SBA office that reportedly have resulted in more than $11 million in bad loans. Curtis Prins, chief investigator for the House banking committee, has been investigating the Richmond office for one month. -- In addition, evidence linking the White House in some of the illegal loan activities is expected to be presented in early testimony. At stake in the hearings is legislation increasing the loanmaking authority of SBA by $2.3 billion, to $6.6 billion. Subcommittee members have voted unanimously to delay action on the legislation until the air is cleared over the charges of widespread corruption. Hie SBA will reach its legal debt ceiling of $4.3 billion, November 30, drugs. The majority opinion, written by Justices Thomas W. Caldecott and Murray Draper, referred to a report by the National Commission of Marijuana and Drug Abuse: There is clear and definite evidence that marijuana is a dangerous drug. Particularly when used by persons with and I ! without additional authorization from Congress, the only new loans approved by the police here have New York Probe Unit Declared borderline or personalities psychotic disorders, by young people in their formative years and Constitutional perhaps by women of childbearing . (UPI) Horses are generally mounted from the left side because soldiers of past centuries wore their long swords and shields on their left side. - The con(UPI) stitutionality of the New York State Investigation Commission (SIC) was upheld by the states Court of Appeals, November 21, in a suit brought by Albany Police Chief Edward McCardle and two officers. The states highest court voted unanimously to reject an appeal by the men of an earlier ruling by the Appellate Division of the State Supreme Court. Hie Appellate Division ruling, which overturned an initial ruling by State Supreme Court Justice Russell A. Hunt, maintained the SIC was constitutional because its life must be extended from time to time by the legislature. Hunt had ruled that, since the Commission had been extended year after year since 1958, it had become, in effect, a permanent commission rather than the temporary commission it was intended and, thus, was unconstitutional. ALBANY In Days of Chivalry repayment of current loans. SBA officials believe the use of repayment money would trim loan programs by up to 75 per cent. womens liberation movement has had an impact on the choices made for future life styles. The Institute reports in a separate atsurvey on the finance-relate- d titudes of youth (1972) that for the first time more than 50 per cent of young females surveyed disagreed that women's place was in the home. Divorce is becoming more commonplace. Many transadults no longer enter marriage with the same expectations of never-endin- g love and fidelity that their parents had. As the study points out, some young people who view life in this new light turn temporarily to living together unwed, or living in communes. Most, however, plan the to assume eventually traditional family role. The sociological study, in assessing the transadult impact in our society, predicts significant economic repercussions, just as the formalization of adolescence had economic effects." Doubt Defined As 'Reasonable Or 'Substantial ST. ng agency would have to come from A friend. Zerick contacted' the woman's attorney, Joseph Malek, who found $42,000 in cash plus savings passbooks, stocks and bonds worth more than $100,000 in a safe deposit box belonging to the dead woman. ' For Corruption By Cheryl Arvidson A House WASHINGTON (UPI) - reported. Mrs. Frieda Zimmer, who died July 5, left no address when she collapsed from a heart attack on the street. She had previously lived in the cheapest room of an apartment house, sharing a bathroom with two other tenants before disappearing after failing to pay her rent. Det. Sgt. Emery Zerick, who specializes in tracking down survivors and friends of aged residents moving here from around the country, said Mrs. Zimmer was traced following the death of a man who had been her goals. The study notes that it is often a time when responsibilities potential. The Justices said that despite disagreement about the dangers of marijuana use, there was evidence of real damage. (UPI) who died last summer in apparent poverty left an estate of almost $150,000 in cash and woman adolescence and are openly experimenting with different life styles, searching for career orientation, and testing educational pre-existi- College experience has become accessible to a larger and wider range of young people. During the 1960s the college population doubled from 3.5 to 7 million. The college student, isolated from many social influences and surrounded by people his own age, found it easy to develop a new set of values. The freedom is maximized. The desire i A SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) California State Court of Appeal has held that a life sentence for a firsttime conviction for the sale of marijuana is not cruel and unusual punishment. In a 1 decision, November 21, the panel held that: the courts should not interfere in the setting of Accidents. In the introduction, the of were development childhood and recognized; adulthood. During the early part of the twentieth century adolescence became viewed as a distinct third stage. Now, reports the Institute of Life Insurance, we may be in the process of adding a fourth stage: transadulthood. What is transadulthood? According to a study on alternative life styles done for the Institute by sociologists at Rutgers University, transadults see themselves neither as adults nor adolescents, but as people in a stage of transition, a personal Ruled Legal Per- soft-boun- to keep options open, to be constantly flexible and prepared for change is characteristic of the Life Sentence For 'Pot' Sale course instructors and students. Chapter titles are: A Chiefs Powers and Problems; Political Actions and Rights; Fire Incidents; Copies depart- reported, department's preliminary Legal Handbook decisions -TYORK (ACCN) two major stages of raditionally, November 27. The industrial operating rate for October was 2.5 points ahead of the year-ag- o figure, according to the Group Publishes 116-pa- McGraw-Hill- s ment of economics Fire Protection BOSTON Transadult New Stage Between Youth, Maturity Capacity - (PPI) MONDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1973 LOUIS, MO., (UPI)-T- he phrase reasonable doubt" in instructions to juries should not be taken to mean the same as substantial doubt the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has said in an opinion. In their opinion, available to the press, November 16, the judges cited a statement by Missouri Supreme Court Justice Robert E. Seiler that if one had to undergo a serious operation and were querying the doctor as to the prospects for a successful outcome, how differently the person would feel if the doctor told him there was only a reasonable chance of success as opposed to a substantial chance of success. Hie commonly used federal instruction to jurors is that a reasonable doubt is based on reason and which is reasonable in view of all the evidence putting it another way, a reasonable doubt and not the mere possibility of innocence. The courts stand on the question came in a ruling upholding the conviction of Sylvesteer Atkins, described by authorities as a major heroin dealer in the Pruit Igoe housing complex in North St. Louis. The appellate judges said Atkins conviction would stand because there was no objection raised about the jury instruction at the time of Atkins trial. i |