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Show s ris at WESTERN AMERICANA Univorsltyof uth Libraris Salt Me City, h 8 4112 Ut-- NJ'S V0LUMJ15, NUMBER LEGAL NOTICES; 109 TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1971 4873651 SALT LAKE Replies to Student: Supreme Court Decisions Liberty? CRASH HELMETS REQUIRED Trial Court: Found defendant guil- objectives in coming to Washington was to do what I could to reverse the past trend of increasing U.S. military involvement in Southeast Asia." His views were outlined in a letter published by The Stanford Daily, replying to an April 7 petition suggesting he resign from government. Its initial signers included Robert McAfee Brown, professor of religion; B. Davie Napier, dean of ty. Supreme Court: Affirmed. Statute held constitutional. Justice A. H. Ellett writing opinion. Tuckett & Henriod concurring. Dissenting: Justice J. Alan Crockett . . . statute a good example of the continuous process of imposing ever more limitations upon individual freedoms. Justice C. J. Callister concurring in dissenting opinion. Decision in detail page Plaintiff Counse: Vernon B. Romney Lauren N. Beasley Defendant Counsel: Van Stiver, Florence, Hutchinson & Sharp Bryan R. Florence the chapel; Robert Moulton, associate director of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center; and Psychology Prof. Eleanor Maccoby. Noting they had particularly criticized defoliation in Vietnam, Packard said: "Here also we have reversed previous policy. Defoliant use in Southeast Asia is now governed by exactly the same standards and restrictions we use for ourselves in the U.S. "I believe this change was worth making, and I am glad I could help page six Judge Defends Warren Court At Bar Meeting NEW YORK (ACCN) - do it." said he was both "dissatisfied and pleased with his Packard A vigorous defense of the U.S. Supreme Court record under the leadership of former Chief Justice Earl Warren was made in an address here recently by Judge J. months in office. "I am dissatisfied that pressing problems remain before us, he declared. "I have found that things do not always move as fast or as smoothly here in Washington as many of us would like. But I did not expect this to be an easy job. Skelly Wright of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. Speaking at the annual meeting of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, Judge Wright said the Warren Court's critics often have descended to arrogance and scurrility. As an example he pointed to a 1964 Harvard Law Review foreword by Professor Philip Kurland of the University of Chicago Law School. Another person whom he criticized was Profess (x-- Alexander Bickel of the Yale Law School. Both were law clerks to Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter. Judge Wright called Professor Bickel the "new leader" of scholastic critics who are reverting back to the theory that social policy is a subject for the legislative branch, not the courts. Abandoning the Supreme Court as a protector of constitutional rights, Judge Wright said, "will not bear analysis." "The critics' suggestion," he noted, "that the political process through our pluralistic system can protect minorities and individual rights betrays an ignorance of political reality." While granting that minorities do have lobbies, Judge Wright said that the speaking, "influentially of the blacks, representatives Mexican Americans, consumers and environmentalists are not in the same league with the military-industrial complex and the highway name but two." to lobby "The scholars have overstated their case against the Warren Court, he said. CHICAGO Continued on page 8 Dont Wait Up: World Headed For Dismal End Aeons From Now -General James WASHINGTON (UPI) M. Gavin, the retired Army and diplomat turned businessman, said today unease over the nations economic condition permeates the business community. "We are very worried," Gavin, chairman of the board of the management consulting firm of Arthur D. Little, Inc., testified before a subcommittee of the House-Senat- e joint economic committee. "We see nothing to get the wage-pric-e situation under control, he said. "Inflation seems to be eating on itself. Unemployment is rising. Were told the Vietnam withdrawals are cutting down military spending, but the defense budget doesn't show (UPI) Housing Secretary George Romney has predicted that even if the nation had a completely open housing market, people would "gravitate into racial or ethnic residential enclaves. Romney said the government has no right to interfere with individual preferences. But, he said, when there is "a dual system that sorts out homeseekers by the color of their skin ... and 1 closes off housing options ... public and private leadership has a responsibility to break that system wide open. Romney spoke to the Leadership Council for Metropolitan Open Communities here June 1, and praised the Councils efforts toward equal housing opportunities. He said winning equal housing opportunity has proved to be the highest hurdle of all for the nations minority group citizens. June 19"23 1971 Haiti Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Months of planning by the conference committees have gone into preparing the program to be presented to delegates this year. The general sessions have been scheduled with a complement of distinguished guest speakers who will define some of the trends affecting the industry in terms of todays meaning. These speakers can and will project present trends into the future so credit granters will know what is coming and how to deal with it. Discussion panels of credit granters who have learned their profession in the field will sharpen the focus of the overall picture drawn by the general session speakers, and will discuss these trends as they apply to the consumer Gavin said the defense budget of billion can and should be cut by 878 up to 820 billion. In response to a rapid fire series of s., 487-065- Cbssumer Credit Conference it." questions from Proxmire, NOTICES: No Magic Key in Open Housing On Economy the Pentagon, Deputy Defense Secretary David Packard said May 26, he felt it was "useful" for him to have played "an active part in turning America around, away fr-war and toward peace. A prominent Stanford alumnus and former University trustee, Packard said: "One of my primary ABOVE 35 M.P.H. UTAH v. ACKER LEGAL Pessimism STANFORD, CALIF. (ACCN) -Responding to a Stanford campus petition suggesting he resign from Statute Infringement on Personal UTAH ITY, Gavin Voices Won't Quit Defense Post, Packard Says Capsule C Sen. William Gavin made these other points: He has reluctantly concluded that only a Congressionally stipulated deadline will remove the United States from Vietnam. He said it would be difficult but possible to complete the withdrawal by the end of this year. The United States should cut its garrison in Europe to 75,000 men, giving impetus to the idea of a European Army created by the Common Market nations for Europes defense. The key to Europe has always been the Mediterranean and North Africa, an area falling under Soviet credit credit industry. 309-000-m- an THOMAS troop withdrawals are probably genuine in view of the Soviet Unions domestic troubles. "Their economy is creaking and groaning, he said. "They have management troubles. They have put tremendous wealth in Their system is the Mid-Eas-t. becoming conservative. He said the United States could capitalize on n. Committee tion, Salt Lake City, Utah, Conference al Co- ordinator. Ester Phillips, Utah, Deseret Book Company, Salt Lake City, r. Conference al te "Salt Lake City Night Committee Chairman: D. Kirk Jensen, General Tire Service. those conditions. Congress should Co- - chairman: Franke Catmull, Utah Sand and Gravel insist on a of change management in exchange for the 8250 million loan guarantee Products. Salt Lake City Attendance Committee Chairman: Lowell Richards, Deseret Federal Savings & Loan Association, Marilyn Bateman, & Trust. Bank Valley Salt Lake City Welcoming Committee Chairman: John E. Ramey, First Security Bank. Mrs. Gloria Oldham. First Security State Bank. the Nixon Administration has proposed for the Lockheed Aircraft LOS ANGELES (ACCN) The Corporation, the nations largest next five billion years bodes ill for defense contractor. Without the of Lockheed our earth according to Dr. William ouster top the J. Kaufmann, director of the Griffith management, he said, guarantee Park astronomical observatory would look like "a reward for failure. here. As explained by Dr. Kaufman, there will be great changes in our earth and the solar system as the Cites Bar Duty sun grows old. For example, as nuclear fuel at "It is the duty of the (ACCN) the center of the sun is used up, the bar to the public and to itself to keep sun will expand to thousands of an open mind on the possibilities of times its present size. As this hapreform of the auto tort system, to pens, initially the earth will go welcome new proposals and to hold through a severe ice age. Then, as itself out to give them serious the sun continues to grow in size, the consideration. It must not disqualify oceans will evaporate and the itself because of economic interest earths atmosphere will be blown off from its duty to be concerned with into outer space by the suns intense evaluation and enlightenment of the heat. Finally, the land and mounpublic as to the important issues tains will melt and the entire earth presented by any plan for comwill resemble a large marble made pensation of automobile accident from molten glass. victims. I recognize that the issue is As still more millions of years such that all persons who have taken pass, according to Dr. Kaufman, the and urged positions on it may have sun will rapidly shrink in size and strong economic or personal the earth will cool. Eventually the motivations, and that this is not the sun will become so small that a exclusive shortcoming of the bar." future space traveler landing on the New Jersey Gov. William T. earth will find a frigid wasteland Cahill in an address to the 1971 with a small dim object in the sky, annual meeting of the New Jersey the last remains of what once was Bar Association. - n: Salt Lake City Committee Chairman : James L. Thornton, Utah Power and Light Fern C. Handy. Utah State Company. Credit Union. Emp. Salt Lake City Prize Committee Chairman : Maynard M. Sorensen, Southeast Furniture Donna Colburn, MetropoliCompany. tan Water District. Salt Lake City Publicity Committee Chairman: Ron Smith, AVCO Financial Service. Virginia P. Winter, Mountain Fuel Supply Company Salt Lake City Women's Entertainment Committee Chairman: Mrs. LaVerne B. Giles. Huddart Floral ComCarol Workman, Associates Fipany. nance Company. 'kick Fund-Raisin- g n: - n: n: Indict Missing Chicago Alderman CHICAGO (UPI) Missing Chicago Alderman Fred D. Hubbard was indicted June 2 on charges of theft and forgery in the disap- pearance of 898,500 from a federally funded program which he headed, our sun. WO rnmmt Conf. Conf. n. Thomas A. Valle, Caldwell, Richards & Sorensen, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah, General Conference Mrs. Louise Slater, Nationwide Acceptance Corpora- Russian proposals for mutual fv'w ESTHEt PHILLIPS MIS. LOUISE SLATEI Local Conference penetration. W A. VALLE Gan. Conf. Chrmn. 0 eww in Mexico City, a reputed girl friend of the Alderman, Camille Landry, said she would return to Chicago to face theft charges filed against her. She called the charges false. |