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Show Serial Urd3f &j,rtlnjnt of Utah Unlverulty Salt Lake City, Utah 64112 ijub. O0U SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH VOLUME 15, NUMBER 195 White House May Use U.S. Judges Tail to File 52 SALT LAKE FIRMS FACE INVOLUNTARY Phase Two In DISSOLUTION - The White (UPI) House is secretly drafting plans for the creation, of a superpanel of federal judges who would make the final decisions on wage-pric- e issues, CHICAGO Deputy Attorney General Robert B. Hansen filed a complaint in District Court enjoining fifty two Salt Lake County corporations failing to file required annual reports with the Secretary of State. Under the (a), provisions of Section Utah Code Annotated 1953, each of the defendants should be involuntarily dissolved, and the court should appoint a receiver to manage and distribute the assets of each of the defendants, if there are any such assets according to the complaint filed by Mr. Hansen. The following corporations have been named in the complaint: A & Z Janitorial Service & Supply, Inc.; Action Motivators & Associates; Activity Time Products, Inc.; Adamson Enterprises, Inc.; Admiral Hospitals Incorporated; Advanced Oil & Mineral Exploration, Inc.; Advertising Associates, Inc.; .Aerox Corporation; Air Engineering Limited; Air Utah Sales, Inc.; Alaskan Outsiders Midnight Sun Investment Co., Inc.; Albar Products, Inc; Albert Toronto Corporation; Alja Inc.; Allens Ford Sales, Inc.; Alta Aircraft Sales, Inc.; Alta Bowl, Inc.; Altop Ice & Carobnic, Inc.; American Chemical Processes, Ltd.; American Diversified Industries; American Energy Company; The American Foundry and Machine Company; American Funding Corporation; American Heritage Enterprises, Inc.; American Host; American Label Company, Inc.; American Pacific Plywood Corporation of Utah; Amherst Realty and Investment Company; Andromeda Corporation; Anitas Foods, Inc.; Apollo Silver and Oil Co., Inc.; 16-10-- 89 the Chicago Sun-Tim- has report- es ed. In a dispatch from its Washington Bureau, the paper said the White House staff is drawing up plans for the second phase of the wage-pric- e freeze with an unhappy awareness that they will probably have to live with (its) machinery through the 1972 elections. Finding no cause for optimism that conditions will be ripe to lift the restraints before November, 1972, command special prestige, and because they will be faced primarily with issues of equity. The commission of judges would apparently ' rest at the top of a hierarchy of industry-oriente- d subcommissions, all comprised of one representative each from industry, labor and the public sector, the story said. House appears to set guidelines to Architectural Products for the prepared stock of dividends, West, Inc.; Ashley Valley Oil Com- restrain the rise pany; Ashton Company, Inc.; Ash- but is likely to reject pressures for a ton Construction Company; Aspen ceiling on interest rates, the The White Sun-Tim- Grove, Inc.; Associated Development Company, Inc.; Associated Distributors, Inc.; Associated Engineering Services, Ltd.; Associates Fifty-TwInc.; Astrolite Corporation; es said. As the President said in Detroit, interest rates have been declining since the freeze was declared, it said. o, Atlantic & Pacific Food Sales, Inc.; Atomic Oil Incorporated; Audience Promotions, Inc. dba Apro, Inc.; Austin Mining Company; Auto Wholesale; Automated Industrial Data Systems (AIDS) Inc.; Autor-iuTheatres, Inc.; Axtel Construction, Inc.; Zarbock Plumbing Company; Zion Rambler City, Inc.; Zions Hardware Corporation. m Two Women Join Board at Ford Foundation NEW YORK (ACCN) -- . The election to the Board of Trustees of the Ford Foundation of Mrs. Dorothy Nepper Marshall, dean of faculties and provost of the Boston campus of the University of Massachusetts, and Mrs. Patricia McGowan Wald, a lawyer and an expert on poverty and juvenile law and bail reform, was announced October 4 by Julius A. Stratton, chairman of the board. Mrs. Marshall served as dean at Bryn Mawr from 1947 to 1970, and is an authority on Spanish and Latin American culture. Mrs. Wald was a member of the Presidents Commission (Hi Crime in the District of Columbia and a consultant to both the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Criminal Justice, and the National Advisory-Committeon Civil Disorders. Bill Requires Commitment For Addicts - (UPI) The only to at the drug abuse way get in United the States is to problem allow for suspected addicts to be committed against their will, Rep. WASHINGTON Bill Archer, We R-Te- x., has asserted. wait any the scourge cannot simply longer to meet head-o- n of drug addiction and its companion, crime, Archer said in a statement. Archer is sponsoring a drug rehabilitation and control Mil that includes as a major point the involuntary civil commitment of suspected addicts. The bill would change the 1966 narcotic addict rehabilitation act so that a relative, law enforcement officer, or health official could start commitment proceedings against anybody he believed to be an addict. The person suspecting another of addiction would have to swear an affidavit to the U.S. attorney, then the U.S. attorney would have to determine "probable cause for commitment. If he found there was, he could initiate court action. If the court agreed there was "probable cause if for commitment and rehabilitation facilities were available, a court could order and psychiatric physical examinations of the suspected Color Choice Stamps You as Doer, e Dreamer, Highbrow, UTAH SUPREME COURT AIRS WARRANTLESS Play-lt-Saf- - SEIZURE QUESTION MINNEAPOLIS (ACCN) When you get angry do you see red? and do you feel blue when things UTAH v. RICHARDS Trial Court: Convicted .of 2nd gree burglary. de- REVERSED for Supreme Court: new trial. Sole justification for the seizure was the expressed belief of Officer Fife that the truck was involved in another crime. Justice A. H. Ellett concurring: In remanding this case for a new trial, we do so with certainty that a burglar will be set free to prey again upon a society a society which seems to have scarcely any rights at all under the Constitution as now interpreted. law-abidi- ng the Presidents specialists are struggling to design an apparatus which will be so manifestly equitable that no group, particularly labor, can reject it with impunity from public opinion, said the story by Charles Bartlett. The story noted that judges seem best fitted for the role of superalthough they panelists because, are rarely economists, they . . . have been confirmed by the Senate as impartial arbiters, because they Justice J. Alan Crockett senting: I believe . . . entirely reasonable suspicion of being implicated in crime, which it is their duty to investigate. dis- SEE COMPLETE DECISION PAGE 3 . State counsel: Vernon B. Romney Lauren N. Beasley Defendants counsel: Hatch, McRae, Richardson Kinghom 707 Boston Bldg. Sc Japan Official Assails Nixon Economy Policy - FRIDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1971 WASHINGTON (UPI) Japanese Finance Minister Mikio Mizuta has accused the Nixon administrations new economic policy of disrupting the international monetary ' system and urged creation of a new system not based on one national currency. Mizuta told the World Bank governors meeting here that the economic policies enacted by President Nixon August 15 have caused difficulties and confusion abroad and, in fact, have jolted the international monetary system. aren't going right? Color is often used to express or describe moods. But color has a far more important function, according to a study by the Family Economics Bureau of Northwestern National Life Insurance Company here. Color is a powerful force. in determining moods, and temperament behaviour. Color is part of life, yet most people are not aware of the influence it exerts. You may not be conscious of the colors around you, btrt they do things to you, whether you like it or not. Psychologists have found that 90 per cent of our actions are prompted by emotion and only 10 percent by reason. Reactions to color are an individual thing, yet there is enough similarity among people to be able to classify personality traits in terms of color, reports the Family Economics Bureau. Extroverts tend to favor bright, warm colors; introverts like subdued, cool colors. Red For Vitality Red goes with people who have a vital, if not a violent interest in the world. They are quick to judge, quick to act and they live eventful livs of ups and downs. A preference for yellow reveals intellectual ex- tremes superior mental ability or retarded mentality. Lovers of green, frequently social in nature, try to have the good things in life and to be well regarded by others. Blue-gree- n people have in difficulty getting along with others and are frequently divorced. A blue person tries to lead a steady life, seldom acting on impulse or taking chances. Navy blue devotees are the ultimate in conservatism. Auto makers have found a key to personality in the color of the car a person drives. People who want to tell the world they are serious and responsiMe buy dark colored cars. favor light Middle-of-the-roade- rs colors. customers is apt to be decorated in bright reds and yellows, with lots of light. In a restaurant where they would like to have you dawdle over dinner and drinks, the decor is usually soft and cool, with dim lighting. Color can make you feel warm or cool. In one office,. employees complained that an lounge, painted Mue and grey, was too cold. The management painted the room brown and orange, but did' nothing to change the temperature. There were no more complaints from employees of freezing! Color also gives an indication of weight. Factory employees complained that the Mack boxes they used to tote parts were too heavy. A engineer had the boxes painted light Mue and everyone was happy they were so much lighter! Geography a Factor Geographic, national, cultural and economic factors all play a part in color preference and reactions to color, according to Northwestern National Life. Where the sun is bright and abundant, people like their colors to be strong, rich and brilliant. When sunlight is more scarce, softer, duller colors are preferred, especially the Mues and greens. Latin people like reds Nordic people lean to the Mues and greens. New Englanders like more conservative colors than Californians. People seem to be particularly sensitive about the color of food. The acceptance of almost any food is determined by its color. For example, if butter is too white, it resemMes lard; if too yellow, it color-knowledgea- appears rancid. As an experiment at a dinner party in England, the steaks were whitish grey, the salads Mue and the coffee yellow. Celery was a gaudy pink, milk was the color of Mood and peas looked like Mack caviar. Moat of the guests lost their appetites. Those who ate became violently ill, even though the food was delicious. Sellers Weapoa When it cones to shopping, many of your purchases are made because of the color of the package. Red and yellow packages create an almost hypnotic effect on the supermarket The Two-Ton-e Type A person who wants to express showiness and to assert his ine dividualism goes for the The suspension of convertibility and bright shades. One who wants to of the dollar into gold and other assume high or unusual status goes - reserve assets has thrown the par for the very bright colors, such as shelf. value system into disorder, the yellow and red. A manufacturer of chocolate system which has been a mainstay Moat people dont use reason when candy found that candy with a sugar of the world monetary system, choosing the color of their car. coating in a variety of colors, all Mizuta said. Yellow cars are not big sellers, with the same flavor, sold better Mizuta said the present inalthough because of their high than plain brown and white candy. ternational monetary system had visibility, Consumers feel that the color of they would be the safest been sustained by the strength of the color car to drive. Even though the the package has a great deal to do U.S. dollar. "Recent developments, drab and dark colors Mack, grey, with the quality of the product inthe have made however, pressing are far more side. Housewives were given three beige and navy need to introduce a major reform in one in a an accident, samples of a detergent in involved to be likely the management of the Bretton most people still seem to prefer yellow box, one Mue, and the third Woods system, he said. half yellow and half blue. The them. women said the detergent in the blood Medical tests show that pressure and respiration rates go up yellow box was too strong it even when a person is exposed to bright damaged their clothes. The contents it left color and decrease when under the of the blue box was too weak influence of blues. There is more the chothes dirty. But the detergent box gave excellent tension and excitement with red, . in the yellow-blu- e while blue brings about a greater results. Yet all three boxes cong and sense of tained exactly the same thing! feeling of calm. This makes soft blues and Odors, Too NEW YORK (UPI) Young an is for colors There hospital interesting correlation good Mack lawyers, apparently more greens to odors found and color. Pleasant between also been Blue rooms. has lnleroated in community law service in with colors all associated odors and are to be conducive helpful sleep and other pursuits including politics, of insomnia. cases rose, lilac, coffee, chocolate, have forced some institutions to go and vanilla. Smells most Brains and Brown orange hunting for lawyers with offers of up The bright, warm colors red, disliked lard, kerosene, fish, to 922,000, a prominent Mack atideal and onion, garlic and perprovide vinegar, yellow orange torney has declared. no color. have muscular for spiration vigorous, William J. Lake, president of the settings it and Mues . However affects The tasks. you, color is cool, tranquil Harlem Lawyers one for of suitable the are dominating influences in especially Association, said il has become greens And while setting the pace life. concentration rooms where mental your nearly impoaslMe to find availaMe is for your behaviour, it provides a important. black lawyers for numerous fast-fooA d restaurant or coffee refreshing diversion to everyday requests from instance companies shop, anxious for a quick turnover of life. and other private institutions. two-ton- Young Black Lawyers Find Sellers Market - 200-memb- well-bein- er f i |