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Show 8A 1 2 tean-age- DtSFRET NEWS, FRIDAY, JANUARY 14, 1977 Circuit court plan too costly, JP says "By Robert Mullins The cost of the proposed circuit court legislation is significantly greater than has been reported, a Utah justice of the peace said Thursday, . Speaking at the monthly meeting of Region 12 Law Enforcement Planning Council, Joseph L. Jones Jr., Washington Terrace, Weber County, president of the Utah Justice of the Peace Association, said local units of government would lose, not gain revenue under the plan. An analysis of this legislation by Ogden City indicates they would lose $330,000 annually if the circuit court bill were adopted. A proponent of the legislation had told Ogden offi Utah s courts into th IS' Os and take the court sj stem out of the horse and buggy days of the of judicial service to the public. Apparently misguided figures have been used by proponents of the bill, Jones said. The Justice of the Peace Association is not supporting the circuit court legislation, Jones said, giving six reasons : The cost is prohibitive. Justice of the peace courts 1880s are misdemeanor courts,, that Judge Grant warned that if this moderization process is not accomplished by elective proce dures, the judiciary itself may be forced to take steps to modernize Utah courts is, courts of limited jurisdiction, but which require not jusges. The circuit court would change this concept. well-train- law-train- Jones recommended that the could improve the functions of Utahs lower court by improving salaries, removing tnal de novo and turning city courts into courts of record. This happened in the federal courts in the Brown vs. Board of Education case of 1954, Judge Grant said, and the consequences are still being felt state The taxpayer burden is too great. Revenue will shift from local levels to state levels, thus causmg a loss of local revenue Grant asked the Justice of the Peace Association not to oppose the entire circuit court concept. He said their opposition could center on specifics, but rejection of the entire concept may cause the legislation to be defeated. Salt Lake City Judge Paul G. Grant challenged Jones comments, saying the circuit court proposal is necessary for im- The circuit court proposal will ultimately remove the judi- cial function from the local government levtL The proposal will cause less, not more, responsiveness proving and modernizing Utahs court system. He said this proposal would bring rob drive-i- n Two heavy et teen-ag- e youths robbed the Arctic Circle, 123 0 W. 600 North, of 233 recently, according to Salt Lake City police reports of $233 recentlj, according to Salt Lake City police reports Employe Dennis Stroud told investigators the two came into the establishment and asked to see him When he came uut, one pulled a small caliber revolver, pointed it at him and said, Get over to the till and get the money out or Ill blow your brains By Leo Perry Deseret News staff writer Two panelists agPROVO reed here Thursday night that men and women should be free to work out their own roies and to fill fill their own needs. Chnstine M. Durum and Levi S Peterson wen? panciisto on the Dialogues cn January series, Social and Economic Change In Utah at Brigham Young University. The series is sponsored by the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies and the Utah Endowment for the Humanities. Discussing The Modern Womans Dilemma: Homemaker Versus Home and the Marketplace Ms. Durham, a Salt Lake City lawyer and the mother of four children, said many of the differences in roies between men and women have been the result of artificial assumptions reinforced by labor practice, and inequitable laws. As this changes, both men and women nmy benefit from a greater range of choice and more opportunity to allocate homemaking and hrendwinning chores according to individual preference, she said. A combination of roles, inside and outside the home, may in many cases not decrease ones performance as a homemaker but may actually increase ones ability to care for children and the home, Ms. Durham said. The ideal seems to be men and women controlling their lives so that choices are based on ones own needs and capacities rather than on arbitrary expectations, she said. Watergate figure Gordon Strachan was admitted tc-- the praeti- - of law io Utah decision of the State TLuisday by a Supreme Court. The state's highest court approved Sc; achans application on grounds he had passed the state bar examination and has been recommended by the Utah Sate Bar as being of good moral character and qualified to act as an attorney. Im pleased, said Strachan, 33, a former aide to White House chief of staff K. R. Haldeman. Strachan moved to Salt Lake City four years ago after resigning from the Nixon administration. He said he will practice law as a member of the Salt Lake law firm of Berman and Giauque, where he has worked as a law clerk while awaiting admission to the bar. I appreciate the courts careful consideration of my application, said Strachan. Strachan was indicted along with Hakle-zna- n and John Erlichmann on charges of conspiracy, obstruction of justice and making false statements in the Watergate ccverup. Lit tle v'hu Veie ulsf'uased tiecatiSt he had been granted partial immunity from prosecution when he testified before the Senate Watergate Committee. He admitted in his testimony that he destroyed White House memos dealing with the Watergate burglary while working for Haldeman. Disbarment proceedings were brought against Strachan in New York and California, where he practiced prior to joining the Nixon White House staff. The Utah Bar rejected his first petition for permission to practice in 1975, but he refiled it last year and the bars character and fitness committee recomended on a split vote that the court admit him to practice. Justices A. H . Ellett, Allan Crockett and Gordon Hail approved the application, while Justice Richard Maughan dissented without giving a reason. Justice D. Frank Wilkins did not participate in the ruling. 3-- 1 hospital's annual meeting m Hotel Utah Dr Carlquist, a member of the University of Utah faculty, helped start the LDS Hospital Blood Bank and was instrumental in establishing the Medical Examiner Office in Utah. Elected chiefs of various hospital services were Dr John H. Cook Jr, chairman of the Family Practice Sec-- ' tion; Dr Harry C Wong, chairman of ine Department of Anesthesia ; Dr Joseph P.. Newton, chairman of the Pediatrics Department, and Dr. Robert 11 Burgoyne, chairman of the Depart-- , ment of Psychiatry. Dr Howard C Sharp, a Salt Lake gynecologist, Thursday night was named president of the LDS Hospital medical staff He succeeds Dr. Mark W Muir, a surgeon, as head of the 266 ph sicians and 16 dentists on the staff Dr. Allan Howard Baker, an internist specializing in cardiology, was Named seeret-a- t named president-elec- t. was Dr. J. Gordon Russell, a radiologist Dr John H. Carlquist. retiring after 38 years as a pathologist at LDS Hospital, was presented with the Physician of the Year award during the out. Stroud obeyed, then was told, Get back here and get the money out of the other till, which he also did. Freedom essential, women, men told Court grants Strachan OK 'Wy 4m, s Dog door yields you nnmsNM I;- - j call police. Officers The head and ders which Steve Stanton searched the neighbor-to saw coming through his hood, but were unable locate the man. dogs trap door in the rear of his home at 7:45 p m. Thursday were not those of his hound but of a man. Hold it right there! Stanton ordered, but the intruder backed out and ran, with Stanton in pursuit. The man escaped, and f t j' Stanton returned home to Mreox shoul- ' S a man J tsKjw. Rockwell 10" SA MOTORIZED Muds! Kc. 34-3- 45 if h s M is 400 So. SGO West Mnr Mr. Peterson Mrs. Durham Dr. Peterson, professor of English at Weoer State College, contended that womens liberation, like most revolutions, has secondary forces distracting from its central issue. There is a real danger that in our zeal we may abandon irreplaceable social forms, he said. In reality, people need both freedom and restraint, he warned It is to our advantage to perceive and to preserve those aspects of the traditional relationship between men and women that have enduruig value, he said. Dr. Peterson said there are a thousand levers of non-viole- nt power by which women can move their revolution forward, but they require patience. Orderly changes do not occur overnight, they should not occur overnight, he said. People need time to adjust, he explained. Ms. Durham, who teaches legal research and writing at the J. Reuben Clark Law School at BYU, said women, like men, are first and foremost people, with a variety of needs and abilities. Home, family and children are essential elements of their happiness, but they do not circumscribe that happiness, she said. Hatch cosponsors bill News Washington Bureau WASHINGTON Sen. Orrin G. Hatch. said Thursday he will cosponsor a bill to forbid unionization of the nations armed forces. Sen. Hatch joined with the chief sponsor of the in calling for measure, Sen. Strom Thurmond, fines and imprisonment for those who violate the provisions of the measure. The bill, which goes to the Senate Monday, makes it illegal for any group, individual, association or organization to enroll members of the armed forces in labor organizations. The measure also makes it unlawful for members of the armed forces to support labor organizations if they protest change or focus public opinion on working conditions of the armed forces. Violation of the measure by an individual, if approved by congress, would call for imprisonment for up to five years. Labor organizations in violation would be fined not more than $50,000 but not les3 than h. Suit names trucking firm The U.S. Attorneys Office has filed criminal charges against a Salt Lake City trucking company, Alta Industries, Inc., 105 N. 4th West The company, part of Salt Lake Hardware Division, was charged with four misdemeanor counts. Three of the counts claimed the firm failed to have doctor certificates on physical examinations of various drivers in the Rrivers files at the main offices. The fourth count said the company did not have in its driver qualification file fer one employe the responses of state agencies to said defendants inquiries concerning uie employe's driving record. ImwCT and accessibility cials that (tie city would gain revenue, he said. Deseret News staff writer gynecologist heads staff at IDS Hospital S.L. rs $25,000. 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