| OCR Text |
Show r ffVVY 28 A DESERET Qj NEWS, WEEKEND OF MAY 15, 1976 dentist, dies at 73 Dr. Leslie D. Burbidge, 900 Donner Way, prominent dentist and former member of the Utah State Board of Corrections, died May 14, 1976 in a Salt Lake Health aide resigns The resignation of Michael M. PRICE Williams, executive director of the Four Comers Mental Health Center, was accepted Friday by the Mental Health Authority. James P. Simone, Carbon County commissioner and chairman of the authority, said there were differences which could not be resolved. He did not elaborate on the nature of the differences and Williams was not available for comment. The resignation was effective immediately. The authority consists of a county commissioner from each of the four counties served by the area. Carbon, Emery, Grand and San Juan. Darrell Peck, assistant director, was named acting interim director, Simone said. Grant Smith, Trice, clinical team leader, was named acting assistant director. Presently we have no one to succeed Williams, but we will meet soon to discuss this problem, Simone said. Dr. Burbidge served on the Board of Corrections for 28 years, having orgi-nall- y been appointed by Gov. Herbert Maw. He was named chairman of thp Board in 1957 hy Gov. George D. Clyde, holding that position until 1973. Born and educated in Salt Lake City, Dr. Burbidge graduated from the Univel sity of Utah iii 1929. While there, he participated in football and was on the track team. He received his D.D.S. from Noithwestem Dental Sohoji in 1932 and returned to Salt Lake City in 1933 to practice Plumbers to vote dentistry. Plumbers and pipe fitters will vote this weekend on a tentative pact with seven firms that could return them to work as early as Monday. Approval of the agreement by four locals of the Plumbers and Pipefitters Union would end a k strike affecting piujects in Salt Lake, Davis, Weber and Utah counties. Terms of the agreement were withheld until members votes could be counted, according to Glenn F. Burgeson, mediator with the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service. The tentative pact came after one hour of talks Friday, the second such meeting this week between representatives of the striking workers and the affected firms. Companies affected by the strike since May 1 are Associated Piping and Engineering Corp., Clearfield; Climate Control Inc., 758 S. Redwood Road; Jelco, 301 S. 8th West; Pipe Fabrication and Supply Co., Woods Cross; Pipe and Welding Co., Provo; Weyher Construction Co., 775 N. 7th West, and Peabody Testing Co., Foster City, Calif. contract expired at midnight The old one-yeApril 30. The two sides were about 20 cents per hour apart on the final contract when pickets went up. Dr. Burbidge was By Karen Gilmour Deseret News staff writer Despite the womens liberation movement, the gap between wages paid to men and women for jobs is increasing. Joan Hoff Wilson, professor of history at Sacramento University, said Friday the trend shows up in the median incomes earned by men and women. Ms. Wilson spoke today at a Womens Working Conference sponsored by a grant from the Utah ar Endowment for the Humanities at the YWCA. Ritter hearing Tuesday Forger WASHINGTON OJPI) Hearings on a bill designed to remove Judge Willis Ritter from his post gets as chief federal judge for Utah are scheduled Tuesday. The bill, sponsored by Sen. Jake Gam, would repeal the grandfather clause as it applies to U. S. district judges and require them to give up their chief judgeships at age 70. Ritter is the only chief judge in the country past that age. Judge Ritter has been invited to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee but it is not known if he will accept. U.S. Attorney for Utah Ramon Child said he will testify as will Judge David Lewis, chief judge of the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals and Ritters immediate superior. Robert Hansen, deputy Utah attorney general, will testify as a private citizen. Hansen has been a vocal opponent of Ritter. University of Utah law professor and former acting U.S. attorney for Utah William Lickhart will testify in opposition to the bill. If passed. Gams bill would not remove Ritter from the bench but would take away his job as chief judge. Complaints invrtes you to participate in c SUMMER ADVENTURE will Exciting classes and field trips be presented by the experienced members of the Museum staff. H0MEUTE CHAIN SAWS Sessions begin on June 7 and July 6. We meet twice a week for 4 weeks at 9 00 a m. Students are placed in classes by age Registration fee of $60 includes two half-dafield trips, and a and two two day overnight trip to PRICED AT $12990 full-da- y CAPITOL REEF NATIONAL against Ongley resulted from a police investigation of $275,000 in missing EIMCO funds. Civil action in which the company is seeking restitution is pending in Davis County EXPLORE WITH US ACADEMY jail Gary Scott Ongley, Bountiful, was sentenced Friday to one to 15 years in the Utah State Prison for forgery and theft by deception from EIMCO. Third District Judge Stewart M. Hanson Jr. stayed the sentence for 10 days to allow Ongley time with his family. Ongley pleaded guilty last month to two counts involving $2,020 in forged claims for machine repairs. The claims were submitted to EIMCO EST Division of Corp. Three other complaints involving $14,872 in forged invoices were dismissed at the time of the plea. Ongley wras a sales and customer service manager at the Salt Lake City EIMCO office. COME JUNIOR SCIENCE He is survived by his wife, Grace Kirkham Burbidge; son, Dr. Leslie D. Burbidge, Jr., Cedar City; daughters, Mrs. Bruce F. Sorensen, and Mrs. J. Fred Pingree, Walnut Creek, Calif. Dr. Burbidge Award. Funeral services will be Monday noon at the Monument Park 12th Ward. Viewing will be Sunday from 8 p.m. at 260 E. South Temple and one hour before the funeral. Burial will be in the Salt Lake Cemetery. Active in LDS Church activities, he served a mission to New Zealand and was a high priest in In lieu of flowers, the family requests contributions be sent to the Utah Diabetic Association. of the North- chairman Dental Alumni Association and a member of the University of Utah Alumni Board. In 1973, he received the U. of U.s western Meritorious 6-- Alumni Wage gap wider, women told two-wee- in the Monument Park 12th Ward at the time of his death. He was also a member of the Bonneville Knife and Fork Club and a life member of the Utah State Dental Association. 73, M8495 PARK. -- working a good deal of their lives, she said. Statistics show married women with children can expect to work 25 years of their lives. Married women with no children can expect to work Ms. Wilson quoted the following Labor Depart- ment statistics : In 1955, median income for women was 64 percent of that of men; in 1960, it was 60 percent; in 1968, it was 58 percent ; in 1970, it was 59 percent, and in 1974-7it was 57 percent. What most about years, and 35 women who do not marry will work 45 years of their wives, she said. Ms. Wilson said women have always contributed substantially to the labor women dont realize, is that whether they are married or not, they will be Donald Pasqual Gonzales, 34, 933 Pierpont Ave., has pleaded innocent to charges of criminal homicide and aggravated burglary. Trial was set for June 7. Lynn R. Brown, Gonzales attorney, filed a motion before Third District Judge Petr F. Leary to consider the defense of insanity. Gonzales is charged with breaking into the home of Sione Katoa, 476 Morton Dr., on Christmas Day and firing four shots from a pistol. He is accused ot threatening the life of Katoa and endangering the lives of two other occupants of the home, Otufangavalu Katoa and Semisi Pelenita. Gonzales is also charged with the murder earlier Christmas Day of his brother, Ernest, 28, 48 Jeremy St., who was killed in the family home at 911 W. 8 h North by bullets fired from an automobile in front of the house. on rr y r yvnry tvryyvvry Innocent plea in slaying Dr. L.D. Burbidge, Utah scene CD ynrrn yynry rynr wrvwr onnn r vr Preliminary hearing the murder charge has been set for May 21 in Salt Lake City Court. Want Ads DO MORE THINGS FOR MORE PEOPLE at LOWER COST than any other form T" Eugene D. Bryson dies Eugene D. Bryson, nr! manager 67, He was employed with the Ken Garff Co. for 30 years. president and of Ken Garff Co., died in a Salt Lake Hospital May 14, 1976. A member of The Church of Jesus Born Sept. 10, 1908, in Woodruff, Rich county, he married Grace Garff in June 1934 in the Salt Lake Temple. Saints, he served in the German-Austrai- n Mission and was president of the North German Mission from He had served as Bonneville Stake Sunday School superintendent and on two stake high Councils. Just prior to his death he was a group leader in the high priests of the Cottonwoo d 11th Ward. Christ of Latter-da- y as a missionary He was a graduate of the University of Utah and received a masters degree from Brigham Young University. During World War II he served in the Navy. 1970-197- 3. (Additional obituary information on A 9). Bulldozers deal blow to hopes The hopes of Ceniral City residents were dealt a blow Friday when bull- dozers demolished three houses to make way for a controversial construction project at 500 S. said Kerry Bate, director, Central City Neighborhood Council. Residents may seek an injunction to halt con Denver St. An office building is planned on property that until Friday was occupied by seven houses and a bakery. Central City residents and leaders have opposed the development because of the need for low-cohousing, which would be destroyed, and because the city master-pla- n designates the block y as part of a tinued demolition, and may file a suit against the city because a public hearing was not called. ROAD TEMPORARILY CLOSED TO BINGHAM MINE VISITORS CENTER st high-densit- residential Until The board of adjustments allowed a variance for construction of the office building. But the project they hoped to deter is under way, so we feel really frustrated right now, further notice due to work in progress. of advertising! market. Folklorico unveils artistry of cultures Joining in the Bicentennial celebration extravaganza was a group from Denver, Primeras Figuras del Baile Mexicano, led by Jeannette Trujillo, a classical dancer who belongs in the first rank of artists of Spanish dance. Ramona Sierra, representing the Cantante del Ballet de Pocatello, had complete command as she sang native songs, in both Spanish and English. A local group of three Edgar Solano, Yvonne Miera, and Jose Moreno proved exceptionally popular with their South American dances. Not all the dancers of the Ballet Folklorico are of equal talent and accomplishment, but all of them are vigorous and dance with grace and color. When the company can afford either live musicians isnt there a Mexican or uses combo that could be used? better tapes, the entire performance will he enhanced. Interesting to watch is how anxious each set of dancers is to get on stage, almost pushing off the preceding ensemble before the applause has ended. The highly successful concert was a expression of this large ethnic group in the nations By Harold Lundstrom Deseret News music editor In its celebration of the Bicentennial, the Utah Ballet Folklorico un veiled an exciting attraction Friday night that expresses the authentic warmth end artistry of cultures. The three-hou- r performance in Kingsb&ry Hall was made possible by a grant from the State Bicentennial Commission. It attracted a nearcapacity audience of aficionados who were long and loud in expressing their enthusiastic approval. Directed by Agustin del Razo, the Ballet Folklorico provides both an eyeful as well as an earful. At all times the dancing is exciting, stimulating, and tasteful. The costuming is electrifying. The lighting was dramatic and impressive. The program, which really didnt seem a minute too long, was an outstanding panorama of the excitement and variety of dances of Latin America. It combined several historic Indian dances with the traditional dances of Mexico and also included a cafe group of dances of Rio de Janeiro. Mexican-Indian-Spani- heart-warmin- g TOR A Orrin Hatch CHANGE U. S. Senate Your Family and Mine Deserve Better Representation Orrin Hatch a is Republican running for the United States Senate. He feels his family and yours are not being represented the way they should be. He believes Utahns want a change away from big government and the ever increasing domination of our lives by the federal" bureaucracy. As one of Utah's leading lawyers, he understands the system and what it takes to make changes. He has the youth, vigor, cxpei lenee, integrity and an intense desire to improve the quality of life for Utahns. HR IS TIIL ONLY CANDIDATE NOT ASSOCIATED WITH THE WASHINGTON ESTABLISHMENT. He needs your support in your local mass meetings Monday night. Select delegates who will listen and give Orrin a chance. Let's win for a change! Pd. Pol. Adv. Hatch for Senate. Comm. Shirley Bau, Secy. Housing seminar June 3 John M. King, a nationally recognized consultant on community planning and ousing development, will address a housing seminar June 3 in Salt Lake City. The seminar, sponsored by the American Wood Council and the Utah Society of the American Institute of Architects, will be held at the Salt Lake Hilton, 150 W. 5th South, at 2 p.m. More than 2,000 city planners, home builders and mortgage bankers are expected to attend. Park-lik- e atmosphere . . luxury apartment-home- s $20995 Buy and Save at Call or write the Museum immediately for application form or further intormation. KETCHUMS T7 takTm useu m'ofTnatu r ATtoistoR tipFUjCAM pus; sTd mi 1 2 ui-wa- j Condominium 800 V. 400 SEE 355-465- 6 S. OUR HARDWARE DEPT. If youve thought about visiting Graystone Pines but haven't quiet gotten around to it, may we suggest you come by soon. We say this because we re over 50 sold. Choice units are still available, however. We offer three different models some with two bedrooms, others with three. All with two baths. Prices start at $51 ,000. Move in immediately if you like. If you enjoy quiet, gracious living, come see our beautiful models furnished by Christiansen Furniture Company. Youll like our new, lush landscaping, too. Its like living in a park. Some 200 satisfied have called the Graystone com1 5 over for home plex years. It's a proven address. Open everyday noon to 6 p.m DIAL DIRECT TOLL FREE TO WANT ADS Now, owner-resident- s Agency Newspaper offers a toll free WATS line to Classified Want Corporation within Utah (outside the local Salt Lake Area). Call Monday through Friday from 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. Ph. C Dial 1 800-662-9- 1 t J . 9 M r9V,'?.V 5 V A 1 r 4 j Drive pf!35 Zip Pt.on.No 86 ' or 484-585- Highland Local Salt Luke residents continue to call 521-353- a6 city STATE There's just no better way to get in touch with buyers for the good items you no longer use. Remember, Want Ads do more things tor more people at a lower cost than any other form of advertising. 2 2730 name ADDRESS 484-187- 9 0 , 1 |