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Show 0rd (JUrt Jsriau Univoruity of Utah Salt Loko City, Utoh 6,m2 salt lake city, VOLUME 15, NUMBER 224 Savings Banks' Deposit Rise Shows No Slack ABA The (ACCN) nations mutual savings banks experienced an estimated $400 million deposit gain in October, a record for the month well above the previous high established last year when deposits rose by $276 million, according to preliminary figures released here by the National Association of Mutual Savings Banks. On a seasonally adjusted basis, savings bank deposits grew in October at an estimated annual rate of $7.2 billion, compared with a September estimated rate of $7.7 billion and an August rate of $4.6 billion, which was the industrys low for the year. Dr. Grover W. Ensley, executive vice president of NAMSB, attributed savings banking's record October deposit gain to a new element the impact of the Administration's New Economic Policy on financial markets coupled with continuing consumer uncertainty about em- ployment and inflation. Savings banks have shown a strong rebound in deposit growth as interest rates on competing open-mark- investments et declined following adoption of wage-pric- e t, Dr. restraints in same At commented. the Ensley mid-Augus- time, the American consumer is still waiting to be convinced that the Management Center Funded WASHINGTON ministrator (ACCN) - Ad- Jerris Leonard has announced a Law Enforcement Assistance Administration award of $292,925 to the National District Attorneys Association to create the first National Center for Prosecution Management. Leonard said the Center will provide management aid to state and local prosecutors across the nation and will develop standards for managing and administering prosecution offices. The Center will be a joint venture of the National District Attorneys Association (NDAA), the National College of District Attorneys and the Institute of Court Management of the University of Denver Law and the Institute of Court Management of the University of Denver Law School. The new grant will support of operation. the Center's first-yeLeonard said, The Center will be a major cooperative venture which will break new ground. Prosecutors offices have serious management problems, and want assistance. This is the first project to address their management problems in a major way. Leonard said the Center will conduct a comprehensive, comparative study of prosecutors' ofthe first such study to be fices made in the nation. He said the d and study will be that data will be derived from actual management improvement projects in the prosecutors offices of seven major cities. Leonard said, The combination of action with research will produce immediate improvements in those prosecutors' offices and will also enable the long-terdevelopment of standards and guidelines for all prosecutors. The Center will be in Washington, D.- C. The director will be Mrs. Joan E. Jacoby, now the director of the Office of Crime Analysis of the District of Columbia. ar action-oriente- m Capsules In Federal Courts January 10, 1972, the Joint Committee and the ALI-AB- A Administrations new economic measures are solidly taking hold. Unemployment is down, but only slightly. The economy remains sluggish. And until the consumer is firmly convinced that inflation is being brought under control, he is likely to maintain a high level of ALI-AB- A saving. 3000. Mountain Fuel Reports Houston Study to Explore Modern Real Estate Transactions Increased Earnings Over Last Year Mountain SALT LAKE CITY Fuel Supply Company and subsidiary reported higher earnings for the first nine months of 1971 and for the 12 months ended September 30, 1971, compared with earnings for the comparable periods a year ago. Earnings for the first nine months of 1971 were $5,060,262, or $1.99 a share, compared with earnings of $4,674,821, or $1.84 a share for the same period in 1970. For the 12 months ended September 30, 1971, earnings were $7,797,671, or $3.07 a share, compared with earnings of $7,139,976, or $2.81 a share for the 12 months ended September The Company has applied for increased industrial rates in both Wyoming and Utah in order to pay for the higher costs of purchased gas and to increase the Companys exploration activities for new gas supplies, the report said. A hearing on the Wyoming application has been completed by the Wyoming Public Service Commission, which has not yet rendered its decision, but in Utah a hearing on the application before the Utah Public Service Commission is still in progress. The- Company's subsidiary, Industries, Inc., now consists of two divisions, Wasatch Chemical Division and Interstate Brick Division, both of which reported sales increases for the first nine months of 1971 compared with the comparable period a year ago. A new brick manufacturing plant being constructed for Interstate is on schedule and should be comthe report said. pleted in The fully automated plant will have double the capacity of the present plant and should enable Interstate to meet the demand for brick products a demand which presently exceeds the capacity of the existing plant. En-tra- - da mid-197- 2, House Approves Upping Funds For Interpol - WASHINGTON (UPI) The House has passed and sent to the Senate a bill that would nearly double the ceiling for U.S. dues paid to the international criminal police organization, known as Interpol. The measure, passed on a 344 to 0 roll call vote, would raise the current $28,500 a year ceiling that the United States can pay as dues to $55,000. A report of the House judiciary committee, which drafted the bill, said the United States is one of five nations in the organization that is assessed 6 per cent of the total dues needed to operate Interpol. The other four nations are France, Germany, England and Italy. 109-memb- er Scientists Will Try To Moderate Great Lake Snow As- sociation of The Bar of The City of New York will cosponsor a Monday Forum entitled How to Handle a Criminal Case in the Federal Courts, to be held at The House of The Association, 42 West 44th Street, New York City. For further information write or call Paul W. Wolkin, Director, Joint Committee on Continuing Legal Education, 4025 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104, or telephone (215) 387-- 1 30, 1972. Prosecution MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1971 Handling Criminal Cases On NEW YORK Utah Designed to provide a penetrating analysis of the many aspects of developing a real estate venture, the Course of Study on ModReal Estate Transactions Reem visited IV will be presented at the Shamrock Hilton Hotel in Houston on January 19, 20, and 21, 1972. The financing and development' of government insured and subsi-- . dized housing will be among the featured areas of discussion in this course. The program will focus on the structuring of real estate financing and development, incorporating such special issues as joint ventures and other forms of lender participation, remedial and salvage techniuqes in the defaulting real estate venture, and tax aspects of modem techinques in real estate financing. ALI-AB- A - Second Edition of Trial Manual for the Defense of Criminal Cases Is Published The Joint Committe announced the publication recently of the new, second edition of a major work in the field of criminal law: The Trial Manual for the Defense of Criminal Cases, by Anthony G. Amsterdam, Reporter, and Bernard L. Segal and Martin K. Miller, Associate Reporters. The Manual has become a classic guide for defense counsel including both the novice and the specialist. The new Trial Manual for the Defense of Criminal Cases is over 625 pages in length, and priced at $35.00 (plus $1.75 postage and handling charges.) It may be ordered from the Joint Committee, 4025 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19104. ALI-AB- A ALI-AB- A (New York) metropolitan region. The project, operated by the U.S. Commerce Departments National Oceanic and Atmospheric (NOAA), began November 12 and runs through Ad- ministration December 15. Headed by Dr. Helmut K. Weick-mandirector of NOAAs Atmospheric Physics and Chemistry Laboratory (APCL), Breakthrough In Burglar Alarm System BRIDGEPORT, CONN. (ACCN) A new kind of communications satellite that monitors alarm signals has gone into operation here. Frederic E. Crist, president of Bums International Security Services, Inc., said the new unmanned satellite successfully transmits all burglary and fire signals and has been granted the same Underwriters' Laboratories approval as a manned Grade A central station. This is believed the first time a complete direct wire service has been made available through retransmission teheniques. Crist termed the satellite system development by his companys subsidiary, Burns Electronic Security Services, Inc., a major technical advance. It makes possible extending full burglary and fire alarm services to outlying communities where such protection may not now be available, he said. water. Studies since 1964 have led the NOAA researchers to conclude that it is possible to modify snow crystals through seeding and that it is possible to seed at a rate sufficiently high to modify even intense storms. Nader Urges Consumer Bill Postponed -has urged Consum- er advocate Ralph Nader the Senate to postpone action until connext year on a House-passe- d sumer protection bill which he described as worse than no bill at all. Nader told a Senate government reorganization subcommittee hearing that the administration hoped to get speedy action on the measure to avoid consumer criticism in the 1972 election year. The bill would create a Consumer Protection Agency to represent the before government public regulatory agencies, but Nader said the measure does not allow the agency to participate in informal government proceedings, where, he claimed nearly all decisions affecting the public are made. Nader asked the panel to put the measure off for two to three and said it would be. months better to have no bill at all than to accept the House measure. I 12635 KEITH B .ROMNEY, Plaintiff & heard from administration sources last July or August . . . that they were going to push with all deliberate speed to get this bill passed before the election year, Nader said. Appellant v. RICHARD PROWS, INC., RICHARD S. PROWS & ROBERT W. WOOD, Defendants and Respondents Appellants petition for an Inter- locutory appeal having been heretofore considered, and the Court being sufficiently advised In the premises, It Is ordered that an interlocutory appeal be, and the same is, denied. Boulder, 'meteorological phenomenon that produces heavy, wet snow accumulations in a relatively small coastal area. Such storms are typical of the Great Lakes region, especially Lakes Erie, Ontario, and Michigan; the Adriatic Sea; the Sea of Japan; and other regions where cold air flows over relatively warm WASHINGTON (UPI) s5jU: n, Colorado, the scientists will attempt to seed four or five storms (if that many occur during the term of the study) over the lake. They hope to redistribute the snowfall in such a way that less snow drops on the metro region and the rest is spread farther inland. It is expected that the snowfall pattern, not the amount of snow, will be altered as a result of seeding. Another aspect of the feasibility study is to induce precipitation over the lake in cloud banks that would not naturally release snow. The lake storm is a localized Be - Capsules - - Federal a scheduled have scientists of cloud a seeding feasibility study technique developed over the past four years with the objective of moderating the intensity of Lake Erie snowstorms in the Buffalo BUFFALO (ACCN) Utah Supreme Court Decisions 12649 EDNA L. KOPT, Plaintiff & spondent v. SALT LAKE CITY, Defendant & Appellant Dismissed. Prematurely filed. 12709 DENNIS BAKER v. JOHN W. TURNER, Warden Utah State Prison, et al., Defendants Writ of habeas corpus denied. Case now pending on appeaL 'Golden Guyle' Becomes Scoring Leader All-Ti- me Veteran center Guyle Fielder has become the highest scoring professional hockey player in history. Fielder now has 1,810 points. Fielder, who was lured out of retirement by the Golden Eagles two years ago to join the expansion team in its first year of play in the Western Hockey League, passed the previous high point production of Detroits recently retired Gordie Howe by picking up four assists in his last two games. Blanked in Thursday nights game in the Salt Palace against Seattle, Fielder erupted with assists on the Eagles first three goals Friday night in Seattle tying Howes mark of 1,809 points. Against Portland Sunday, Fielder won the draw in a face off in the left of Portlands goalie Dave Kelly, passing the puck to Wilf Martin who slammed the puck home from the slot 30 feet in front of the Buckaroos net Fielder was mobbed by his teammates as he returned to the player's bench moments v.u, knd re received a standing ovation from the Portland fans when the public announcement of his feat was made. Fielder, who will be 41 years old on the 1st of November, has scored all but 83 of his points in the Western Hockey League, playing with New Westminster, Seattle and Salt Lake. He spent 16 years with the Totems where he copped the league scoring title nine times plus the leagues MVP honors six times. He spent one season, early in his career with SL Louis in the A.H.L. Following the 1968-6- 9 campaign, Fielder announced his retirement to manage a hotel from at Williams Lake, B.C. However, after injuries decimated the new Salt Lake Hockey club in November, 1969, the Eagles obtained the rights to negotiate with Fielder by shipping Bobby Schmautz to Seattle. The Salt Lake efforts were successful and Fielder joined the team on November 20, picking up an assist in his very first game. He has led or tied for the team scoring leadership in both years. He scored 66 pts. his first year, 61 last year, and so far this year Fielder has scored 15 points. . pro-hock- ey A 1 1 |