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Show Perlult. Urdar &))jrtn-;n- t Univornity of Utah Salt Loko City, Utah BM12 I i J j 5 Yr. Utah Supreme Court Decisions - Ciiuule or 6 Mo.? Justices Disagree v TAPP Trial Court: Convicted for possession of marijuana. (Complaint filed January 18, 1969 and sentenced June 22, 1970 for not less than five years.) Conviction affirmed. Remanded for sentence . . . Court: Supreme "must not exceed six months in county jail. (1969 Legislature reduced sentence to maximum six months effective May 13, 1969.) Justice J. Alan Crockett wrote the main opinion. Justices R. L. Tuckett and A. H. Ellett concurring. Dissenting: Justice H. Henri Henriod . . . Under the inconsistencies of the main opinion, the more antisocialable you are, the more "rehabilitative you are if the date of sentence is changed by the legislature, and the more antisocial person can depart to parts unknown until that magic effective date for sentence has arrived and passed. Chief Justice C. J. Callister concurs, See details page 4 B. Vernon counsel: State Romney and Lauren N. Beasley Defendant counsel: Gerald Kinghom, Boston Bldg. 84111 Waldorf Seeks Refund From New York Campus Plans To Test Students Drugs Penn Central PHILADELPHIA - (UPI) District Judge John P. Fullam has taken under advisement a Waldorf-Astori- a hotel petition seeking refund in excess rentals it claimed were erroneously paid to trustees of the Penn Central Railroad for 1970. Frederick P. Click, attorney for the Manhattan hotel, drew the question of Equality Date (ED) into his argument before Fullam, who is of $226,488 overseeingof thebankruptcy carrier. reorganization The ED is the giant formula for and other rentals measuring Waldorf made the by payments under past and current leases between the two parties. Glick claimed the ED was reached last November, while the railroad contends $14.8 million remains to be paid until the date is attained. He pointed out the date is important to the hotel because when it is achieved the Waldorf will receive a substantial reduction in the current rent and will be entitled to a transfer of certain furniture and furnishings owned by the trustees and leased to the hotel. Gilbert Stein, counsel for the trustees, challenged Glicks con- NEW YORK (ACCN) Students and health officials on the State University campus at Stony Brook, L.I. are formulating a testing program to analyze students drugs for impurities adulterants. or Discipline, Banker Says - LOS ANGELES (ACCN) Pres- moves in Phase II necessitate a restrictive posture if the Administrations formidable idential goals are to be met, Dr. Robert T. Parry, vice president of Security Pacific National Bank, a major West Coast .financial institution, told an economic affairs seminar here, October 26. Addressing himself to "The Inflation Syndrome, Dr. Parry told the audience: "One of the great ifs surrounding Phase II concern the Pay Board responses to several major wage contract increases that have already been granted. Construction, paper, steel and auto industries have signed contracts for raises that may be inconsistent with stated percent inflation objectives for 1972. 200-perso- n two-to-thr- - U.S. Common Market Impact On U.S. To Be Varied already Need II Is POSSESSION MARIJUANA UTAH Phase poisonous The sponsors of the plan which would guarantee anonymity for anyone desiring drugs to be tested say that its aim is to deter drug use. They said the analyses would show that high percentage of drugs sold to students contain dangerous poisons. The university administration is inclined to support the program, but the Suffolk County District A- ttorney's office has expressed reservations. Program supporters hope that agreement can be reached with local law enforcement authorities before the dan is put into action. Symposium Set On Atomic Power Control - Labor support for the program easily evaporate if the Pay could Board nullifies these contract provisions. It must be underscored, he continued, Phase II will fail without general public support, including that of labor! explained that the general objective of the freeze and its successor is to purge inflationary He the widely-share- d psychology belief that inflation will continue from the economy. unabated Lowering consumer price increases to the percent annual levels by 1972 were listed as specific goals of the program, a rate roughly half that prevailing before the freeze. two-to-thr- railroad used of the furniture in depreciation calculating its income tax returns. the WASHINGTON1 (ACCN) Turning to effects on businesses, Dr. Parry supported continued exclusion of profit control from Phase II, with the exception of windfall profits as outlined by both the President and Secretary of the Treasury Connally. The President and the Secretary reaffirmed that improved profit performance necessary for more jobs and future economic prosperity now stand too low. ts 11-1- 3, Food Industry record-breakin- m Lags On Price Cut, Data Shows A study of NEW YORK (ACCN) individual sectors of the American economy reveals a varying impact to be likely as a result of an enlarged Common Market, European Common Ground, a publication of Royal Dutch Airlines m - month-to-monl- m (KLM), devoted to furthering international trade, reports. Sector by sector, the Common Ground article notes: The Commercial Aircraft (Italian) Colonna Report suggests community-wid- e letting of contracts for purchases of organizations semi-publi- c such as airlines. Unless it becomes policy to support only European aircraft makers, the U.S. industry feels that it can face increased competition ; certainly the enlarging of the European market by 40 per cent to 45 per cent offers an attractive potential. The Palp, Paper and Board not is of aerospace optimism reflected in the paper industry. It is felt that the going could get rough for Noth American exporters of paper and board if the Scandinavian producers are allowed to enter behind the EEC tariff wall and the U.S. is not. However, those U.S. Archives Conference producing companies tissue, packaging and other paper products in England or on the Continent might benefit from an enlarged market. Automobiles Similarly, those U.S. presently producing on the Continent anticipate favorable results when Britain enters. In the EEC, close to a quarter of all the cars in use and one out of six commercial vehicles are turned out by General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. Once Britain is within the Common Market the export of U.S. cars made in Europe to and from Britain will favorably enlarge the single market the EEC has already become. Companies making Machinery consumer car-make- rs ' industrial, agricultural, construction and other heavy machinery, machine tools and other capital goods see the enlarged EEC as a way of further streamlining their managerial, manufacturing and marketing operations Europe. At in ac- present, Europe counts for 40 per cent of the market for farm and construction tractors and equipment in the ist countries. The future to Utilities Suppliers of this industry, it is felt, lies in a e approach. In 10 terms, in years or so, it is felt that British membership in the multi-nation- al long-rang- could smooth the political process that will make agreement more possible on European company law, a common policy (Hi capital movements and a better, more advanced capital market. The British could also have a favorable impact on liberalizing Community Coming Up ee For commercial banks, he cited a Practicing lawyers, government officials series of cross-currenraising and experts from the cam pusses uncertainty over future Adwill convene at the Shoreham Hotel ministration actions. Present Glick then told the court he stood loan November demand a for raises little here, sluggish corrected, explaining the railroad discussion of to with connected problems difficulty attempts keep had not done so because of the with the regulation of nuclear power interest rates down; however, with hotel's obligation to maintain the the economy expected to grow by at production. furniture. least five percent in real terms next The symposium is sponsored by and with the Federal governthe American Law Institute and the year, ment running a g American Bar Association, which deficit in fiscal 1972, short-teralso put on an introductory seminar credit demands will be large, (hi the subject last year. This years thereby exerting upward pressures program will comprise a more on short-terrates. specialized curriculum, in order to further develop expertise in this "If money market interest rates new field of legal The food highly challenging WASHINGTON (UPI) begin to climb, and thus raise the practice. cost of funds to commercial industry gave consumers. only part inThe symposium will offer an biks, of the potential savings when farm an additional wrinkle of complexity tensive examination of the legal prices went down last month, an aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle and will be added, he said. Money market rate increases are deteragriculture department report has a study of the Atomic Energy mined indicated. by the actions of many Commission's new jurisdiction over The report said the retail cost of a environmental issues. In addition to suppliers and deman ders of funds in basket food "market typical a session on practice and procedure making rates extremely difficult to September was down 0.9 per cent in AEC manage. licensing cases, a special h the first from August session will be devoted to exploring One way the Administration decline recorded this year. antitrust considerations. could rates keep a lid on short-terBut, department economists conat least in the short run, he told the Another session will include a added in the monthly report, sumer prices could have declined featured discussion of significant Economic Affairs audience, would be for the Federal Reserve to even further if food processors and legislative and other current full in the the had and retailers developments provide banks with sufficient licensing passed along reserves to keep rates low. This may 3.2 per cent drop in the farm value of regulation of nuclear power. Prof. Harold P. Green, of the create inflationary pressures at foods in the sample market basket. the Part of the farm price drop, George Washington University some time in the future, especially midas more expansionary policies inNational Law Center, Washington, report said, was kept by food dlemen who boosted their operating D.C., is planning chairman for the crease the supply of money course. available. margins. tention THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1971 CITY, UTAH LAKE SALT VOLUME 15, NUMJjER 212 CHICAGO (ACCN) - Research Use of Federal Court Records: What, Where, and How? will be the topic of the Ninth Archival Symposium to be held at The University of Chicago Law School, Monday, November 15, 1971. The Symposium, sponsored by the Federal Record Center (General Services Administration) and The University of Chicago Law School, will be held in the Weymouth Kirkland Courtroom of the Law School. Registration is from 8:30 to 9:00 a.m. Cost per person is $5.00, payable at registration. The fee includes continental breakfast, attendance at sessions, and coffee. Topics and speakers at the. morning session will include The Origin, Development and Operation of the Federal Courts Records Program of National Archives and Record Service (NARS), presented by Mrs. Dorothy Gersack, Records NARS, Division, Appraisal Washington, D.C. Also on the morning program will be Research Opportunities at the Legion Five Archives Branch, given by Bruce C. Harding, chief of the Archieves Branch of the Federal Records Center at Chicago. The afternoon session will open with A Jurists View of Legal History, as recounted by Senior Judge William Campvell of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He will be followed by Mary K. Tachau of the University of Louisville history department, who will discuss Researching and Writing on Federal Courts in Kentucky. The session will conclude with comments on the program and future of legal history by Stanley N. Katz, professor of legal history, The University of Chicago Law School. Further information may be obtained by contacting the Chief, Archives Branch, Federal Record Center, GSA-NAR- S, 7201 South Leamington Ave., Chicago, Illinois 60638. I purchasing policies. As policy, most U.S. comfield have been conthe in panies cluding licensing agreements and national short-ter- m equity participations with in- digenous corporations. The clusion, however, of a study by the Trade Policy Research Center of the U.K. is that the economics of developing and producing heavy electrical equipment will eventually transcend the problems of national con- pride. 'Fingerprinting' Of Oil Spill Now Possible LOS ANGELES (ACCN) - Un- iversity of Southern California scientists have devised a technique oil from the of fingerprinting massive 1969 platform blowout in the Santa Barbara Channel, a USC geologist has reported. The capability is enabling them to distinguish between oil leaded from underwater wells and that from natural seepage. It hopefully will help clear up many unanswered questions, Dr. Ronald L. Kolpack told fellow scientists meeting at USC. The technique is the result of more than a years work in USC laboratories. Drs. Kolpack and Thomas Meyers, both of USCs Department of Geological Sciences, devised it by adapting extraction methods and gas chromatographic instrumentation for the purpose. In an interview, Kolpack said he hopes the new scientific tool will provide the most reliable estimate yet of the actual amount of oil spilled, where most of it now reposes on the channel bottom, and how much of it has been broken down. ! A |