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JURISDICTION-Continued.

3. Supreme Court-Review of "final" judgments.-Supreme Court has
no jurisdiction under 28 U. S. C. § 1257, which provides for review of
"final" judgments, to review Colorado Supreme Court's judgment remand-
ing case for trial. O'Dell v. Espinoza, p. 430.

JURISDICTIONAL PICKETING. See Labor Management Relations
Act.

JURY INSTRUCTIONS. See Constitutional Law, III, 1; Criminal
Law, 1; Habeas Corpus, 2.

KENTUCKY. See Constitutional Law, III, 2; VI.

LABOR MANAGEMENT RELATIONS ACT.

Union's illegal activities-Employer's "damages"-Attorney's fees in
NLRB proceedings.-In an employer's action under § 303 of Act to recover
damages for union's violation of secondary boycott and jurisdictional pick-
eting prohibitions of National Labor Relations Act, as established in pro-
ceedings before National Labor Relations Board, employer's attorney's
fees incurred during Board proceedings are not a proper element of
"damages" under § 303(b). Summit Valley Industries, Inc. v. Carpenters,
p. 717.

LABOR-MANAGEMENT REPORTING AND DISCLOSURE ACT OF

1959.

Union business agents-Discharge after election of union president.-—
Sections 101(a)(1) and (2) of Act, which guarantee equal voting rights and
rights of free speech and assembly to union members, and § 609, which for-
bids a union to discipline a member for exercising any right under Act,
were not violated when petitioner union members were discharged from
their appointed positions as business agents for respondent local union by
respondent union president following his election over a candidate sup-
ported by petitioners. Finnegan v. Leu, p. 431.

LABOR UNIONS. See Civil Rights Act of 1964, 2-4; Labor Manage-
ment Relations Act; Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure
Act of 1959; National Labor Relations Act.

LANDLORD AND TENANT. See Constitutional Law, III, 2.

LESSER INCLUDED OFFENSES. See Constitutional Law, III, 1.
LIMITATION OF ACTIONS. See Constitutional Law, IV.

MALICE. See Criminal Law, 1.

MANUFACTURERS OF DRUGS. See Trademark Act of 1946.
MECHANICAL ENGINEERS' SOCIETY. See Antitrust Acts.
MEDICARE. See Constitutional Law, III, 3; Jurisdiction, 1.

MERCANTILE EXCHANGES. See Commodity Exchange Act.

MILITARY BASES. See Armed Forces.

MILITARY CRIMINAL CHARGES. See Constitutional Law, VII.
MINNESOTA. See Constitutional Law, V; Standing to Sue.

MISLABELING OF DRUGS. See Trademark Act of 1946.

MISSISSIPPI. See Constitutional Law, I; IX.

MISTRIALS. See Constitutional Law, II.

MOTOR VEHICLE SEARCHES. See Constitutional Law, VIII.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS ACT. See also Labor Management
Relations Act.

1. Collective-bargaining agreements-Construction industry-Subcon-
tracting clauses.-Proviso to § 8(e) of Act, exempting from proscription of
secondary agreements between employer and unions those agreements
that concern contracting or subcontracting of work to be performed at a
construction jobsite, ordinarily shelters subcontracting clauses that re-
quire employer to subcontract jobsite work to subcontractors who are par-
ties to agreement with appropriate union and that are sought or negotiated
in context of a collective-bargaining relationship, even when not limited to
particular jobsites at which both union and nonunion workers are em-
ployed; Court of Appeals, while properly enforcing National Labor Rela-
tions Board's orders upholding validity of such subcontracting clauses,
was without jurisdiction to decide that unions did not violate § 8(b)(4)(A)
in picketing to obtain such clauses, where that issue was not raised in
proceedings before Board. Woelke & Romero Framing, Inc. v. NLRB,
p. 645.

2. Unfair labor practice-Refusal to handle Russian cargo-Secondary
boycott.-Petitioner union's refusal to handle ships' cargo arriving from or
destined for Soviet Union-as a protest against Russian invasion of Af-
ghanistan-thus completely disrupting respondent's business of importing
Russian goods shipped by an American shipper that employed a stevedor-
ing company that in turn employed union members, constituted an illegal
secondary boycott under § 8(b)(4)(B) of Act; application of § 8(b)(4)(B) here
does not infringe First Amendment rights of petitioner or its members.
Longshoremen v. Allied International, Inc., p. 212.

NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD. See Labor Manage-
ment Relations Act; National Labor Relations Act, 1.

NAVY'S DISCHARGE OF ORDNANCE INTO WATERS. See Fed-
eral Water Pollution Control Act.

NEW TRIALS. See Constitutional Law, II; III, 1.

NEW YORK. See Civil Rights Act of 1964, 1.

"NONRECOURSE CLAUSE" IN BILLS OF LADING. See Interstate

Commerce Act.

NOTICE OF EVICTION. See Constitutional Law, III, 2.

OBJECTIONS TO JURY INSTRUCTIONS.

Habeas Corpus, 2.

OHIO. See Habeas Corpus, 2.

OREGON. See Constitutional Law, II.

OVERSEAS MILITARY BASES.

See Criminal Law, 1;

See Armed Forces.

PACKAGE SEARCHES. See Constitutional Law, VIII.
PARENT AND CHILD. See Constitutional Law, IV.
PASSPORTS. See Freedom of Information Act, 1.

PATERNITY SUITS. See Constitutional Law, IV.

PATRONAGE DISCHARGES OF UNION EMPLOYEES. See Labor-
Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959.

PERSONAL JURISDICTION. See Constitutional Law, III, 4.

PHILIPPINES. See Armed Forces.

PICKETING. See Labor Management Relations Act; National Labor
Relations Act, 1.

"PLAIN ERROR" STANDARD OF REVIEW. See Criminal Law, 1.
POLITICAL BOYCOTT OF RUSSIAN GOODS. See National Labor
Relations Act, 2.

POLITICAL CAMPAIGNS. See Constitutional Law, VI.

POLLUTION. See Federal Water Pollution Control Act.

POSTCONVICTION PROCEEDINGS.

Amendments to Rules Governing 28 U. S. C. §2255 Proceedings,
p. 1031.

PRE-EMPTION OF STATE LAW BY FEDERAL LAW. See Con-
stitutional Law, IX.

PREFERENTIAL EMPLOYMENT OF LOCAL NATIONALS AT
OVERSEAS MILITARY BASES. See Armed Forces.

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS. See Trademark Act of 1946.

PRICE MANIPULATION. See Commodity Exchange Act.
PRIMARY ELECTIONS. See Reapportionment.

PRINCIPAL AND AGENT. See Antitrust Acts.

PRISONERS. See Criminal Law; Habeas Corpus, 2.

PRIVATE CAUSES OF ACTION. See Commodity Exchange Act.
PROFESSIONAL SOCIETIES. See Antitrust Acts.

PROSECUTORIAL CONDUCT RESULTING IN MISTRIAL. See
Constitutional Law, II.

PUBLIC DISCLOSURE OF INFORMATION. See Freedom of In-
formation Act.

PUBLIC EMPLOYEES. See Armed Forces; Tucker Act.

PUBLIC UTILITY REGULATORY POLICIES ACT OF 1978.
Constitutional Law, I; IX.

See

RACIAL DISCRIMINATION. See Civil Rights Act of 1964, 2-4.
RAILROAD FREIGHT CHARGES. See Interstate Commerce Act.
RATES OF PUBLIC UTILITIES. See Constitutional Law, I; IX.
REAPPORTIONMENT.

Texas congressional districts-Legislative plan.-In an action challeng-
ing validity of Texas Legislature's reapportionment plan for congressional
districts, District Court having delayed proceeding pending review of plan
under Voting Rights Act of 1965 by Attorney General, who ultimately ob-
jected to certain districts in south Texas but otherwise approved plan-
District Court erred in formulating plan which, in addition to resolving At-
torney General's objection to specified districts, also established new dis-
tricts for Dallas County, Attorney General not having objected to Dallas
County districts under Texas Legislature's plan and District Court not
having found constitutional or statutory violation as to those districts; how-
ever, District Court in first instance should determine whether forthcom-
ing congressional primary elections for Dallas County should be resched-
uled or should proceed under court's interim plan. Upham v. Seamon,
p. 37.

RELIGIOUS FREEDOM. See Constitutional Law, V; Standing to
Sue.

REPORTING AND REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS AS TO
RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS. See Constitutional Law, V;
Standing to Sue.

RES JUDICATA. See Civil Rights Act of 1964, 1.

RETRIALS. See Constitutional Law, II; III, 1.

RIGHT TO SPEEDY TRIAL. See Constitutional Law, VII.

SAFETY CODES. See Antitrust Acts.

SANCTIONS FOR FAILURE TO COMPLY WITH DISCOVERY
ORDERS. See Constitutional Law, III, 4.

SCHOOL BOARD EMPLOYEES. See Education Amendments of
1972.

SEARCHES AND SEIZURES. See Constitutional Law, VIII.

SECONDARY AGREEMENTS BETWEEN EMPLOYERS AND
UNIONS. See National Labor Relations Act, 1.

SECONDARY BOYCOTTS. See Labor Management Relations Act;
National Labor Relations Act, 2.

SELF-DEFENSE. See Habeas Corpus, 2.

SENIORITY SYSTEMS. See Civil Rights Act of 1964, 2-4.
SERVICE OF PROCESS. See Constitutional Law, III, 2.

SEX DISCRIMINATION. See Education Amendments of 1972.

SHERMAN ACT. See Antitrust Acts.

SHIPPERS. See National Labor Relations Act, 2.

SIXTH AMENDMENT. See Constitutional Law, VII.

SOCIAL SECURITY ACT. See Constitutional Law, III, 3; Jurisdic-
tion, 1.

SOLICITATION OF RELIGIOUS CONTRIBUTIONS. See Constitu-
tional Law, V; Standing to Sue.

SPECULATORS IN FUTURES CONTRACTS. See Commodity Ex-
change Act.

SPEEDY TRIAL. See Constitutional Law, VII.

STANDING TO SUE.

Unification Church and its followers-Registration and reporting re-
quirements-Validity of Minnesota statute.-Unification Church and indi-
viduals following its tenets have Art. III standing to challenge validity,
under Establishment Clause of First Amendment, of Minnesota statute
which provides that only those religious organizations that receive more
than half of their total contributions from members or affiliated organiza-
tions are exempt from statutory registration and reporting requirements.
Larson v. Valente, p. 228.

STATE DEPARTMENT. See Freedom of Information Act, 1.

STATES' POWERS. See Constitutional Law, IX.

STATUTES OF LIMITATIONS. See Constitutional Law, IV.

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