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The Daily Spectrum from Saint George, Utah • 17
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The Daily Spectrum from Saint George, Utah • 17

Location:
Saint George, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
17
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Spectrum Sunday, April 24, 1988 5 Obituaries cccd eras rca pecple William Smith Arthur Greenleaf ESCALANTE William Magill Smith, 38, died April 18, 1988 at Ft. Wainwnght, Alaska. He was born Aug. 30, 1949 in Worthington, Perm, to Magill and Helen Josephine Stouffer He married Kathleen Schow Feb. 18, Las Veeas.

Nev. a heart transplant in Dec. 1983. Suvivors include wife of Panguitch; four daughters: Mrs. Linda Allen, Littleton, Mrs.

William (Joan) Rochford, Phoenix; Mrs. Carole Lambert, San Leandro, Mrs. Greg (Jane) Excell, Panguitch. Also six grandchildren, one great-grandaughter, and his mother of Panguitch. Graveside services Monday, April 25, at 1 p.m.

at the Panguitch Cemetery with military rites by the Panguitch American Legion Post. Funeral director Neal S. Magleby and Sons Mortuary. PANGUITCH Arthur Augustus "Art" Greenleaf 61, of Panguitch, Utah, died April 23, 1988 in a Panguitch hospital. Born Sept.

8, 1926 in Santa Ana, to Arthur Augustus and Mary Elizabeth Duck-, ett Greenleaf. Married Margaret Ruth Farley on July 24, 1946, in San Francisco, Calif. He had been employed by Kaiser Steel in California as a fireman for 23 years. Moved to Utah in May 1970, and was employed by Farnsworth Chevrolet of Panguitch and then by Garfield County as a sanitation driver until 1983, at which time her retired due to his health. He received ir Arthur i jT Smith.

Pi -J 1971 in William Smith kit f- if He was serving of service. He is children, all of Clyde Nev. Kirkland, Funeral p.m. in a member of the LDS Church and was in the U.S. Army where he had 12 years survived by his wife of Escalante and Elizabeth Ann of Pennsylvania, William Joseph, Andrew Magill and Kristal Evan, Escalante; his mother and step father, and Helen Springstead of Mesquite, and two sisters, Nancy Winslow and Kay both of Pennsylvania.

services will be held Monday at 1 the Escalante LDS Stake Center where friends mav call two hours prior to services. Kimball Forbes MCD-CCC-A Clinical Audiologist Because of the recent advancements in science and medicine, today, nearly everyone with hearing loss can benefit from available help. Three major factors help make this possible: 1. Advances in medical knowledge and new surgical techniques. 2.

Tiny, inconspicuous, high performance hearing aids made possible by space technology. 3. Greater public awareness of available hearing help. Thanks to famous Americans who publicly acknowledge their own hearing loss, many people are seeking help Interment will be in the Escalante City Cemetery with military graveside services. The funeral is under the direction of Southern Utah Mortuary.

Hazel Farnsworth Stephen Pearce ST. GEORGE Stephen K. Pearce, 70, died April 21, 1988, at Dixie Medical Center after an extended illness. He was born Feb. 12, 1918, in Bountiful, Utah, to Francis G.

and Edith Anne Keats Pearce. He attended Davis County schools and graduated from Davis High School in 1935. He served in the Army in World War II. He was a member of the American Legion Bountiful Post and has served as post commander and district commander. He has been a delegate to the Republican National Convention.

He married Ruth Robinson in 1947 and their marriage ws later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He had resided in Bountiful most of his life. He was owner and president of the Crest-wood Furniture Manufacturing Co. An active member of the LDS Church, he had served in the Senior Aaronic Program and in various ward clerk callings. Survivors include his wife, Ruth, of St.

George; daughters: Janet Davis of Mesa, Robyn Steed of Pleasant Grove, Utah; a son, Stephen Dean Pearce of Hayward, 10 grandchildren. He was preceded in death by a sister and two brothers. Funeral services will be held at the Bountiful North Canyon Fifth Ward Chapel (2505 South Davis), Monday, April 25, 1988, at 2 p.m. Friends may call at the Russon Brothers Bountiful Mortuary Sunday from 6 until 8 p.m. and Monday at the ward one hour Srior to services.

Interment will be in ountiful City Cemetery. Local arrangements under the direction of Spilsbury and Graff Mortuary. LAS VEGAS, Nev. Hazel Bracken Farnsworth, 96, die April 15 in Boulder City, Nev. She was born Dec.

12, 1891 in Pine Valley, Utah. She lived in Las Vegas for 67 years and was married Frank W. Farnsworth of St. George. She is survived by two daughters, Janet F.

Dimick of La Verkin, and Ella F. Bell of Boulder City, Nev. She had 10 grandchildren, 25 greatgrandchildren and 25 great-greatgrandchildren. Evan Gunnell LA VERKIN Evan Gunnell, age 85, died April 22, 1988, in Hurricane. He was born July 23, 1902, in Central, Idaho, to Thomas L.

and Sarah Pop-pleton Gunnell. He married Ruby Kynaston Oct, 30, 1923, in Soda Springs, Idaho. He worked for the Union Pacific Railroad as a miner at the ACM Co. in Condo, Idaho. He retired from Valley Nitrogen Plant as a mill operator in 1962.

He moved to La Verkin in 1979 for health reasons. He was an active outdoorsman and loved to hunt and fish. Survivors include his wife, Ruby, of La Verkin: three sons: Clarence of with prcslems and enjoying life much more. President Reagan, for example, uses hearing aids to help overcome a hearing loss. Other well know personalities, including Nanette Fabray, Lou Ferrigno, Art Carney and Arnold Palmer overcame hearing problems with surgery or with the use of a hearing aid.

The Hearing and Speech Clinics of Southern Utah recommends that hearing problems deserve professional care. Call Kimball C. Forbes, MCD, CCC-A, Washington and Iron counties' only full-time clinical audiologist for an appointment. The Hearing and Speech Clinics of Southern Utah offers a FREE brochure on Ten Common Myths about Call 628-1107 in St. George.

586-2078 in Cedar City. RAISED PANEL' NOW ON SALE Utah 84770 Blvd. mmS ODDDDDDUg' ii ii 1 1 r. i nv-' The 9itiv STANLEY STEED Geneva Workman GLENDALE Geneva Winson Workman, 80, died April 21, 1988 of cancer in Salt Lake City. She was born Feb.

18, 1908 in Hammond, N. to Elijah GARAGE DOORS Now available in, 88 COLORS Jerome Gifford i i Perry and Elisa Ann HamDiin winsor. sne married Sam Clark Workman Feb. 11, 1924. The marriage was later solemnized in the LDS Temple.

He died July 3, 1961. Her life has been full of service to others. She was active in her church throughout her life and had a great love for youth, serving for many years as president of the young women's organization. She was called twice to serve in the Kentucky-Tennessee mission, first in 1972-73 and later in 1975-77. She is survived by seven sons and four daughters: Clark Merle, Ernest Dee, Milton Ross, Sam Lewis and Keary, all of Salt Lake City; Albert of Lompoc, Lawrence Winsor, of Henderson, Mrs.

Garry (Sheila) L. Foote of South Charleston, Virtually maintenance free Backed by 10-year warranty Won't warp, crack or rot Durable 24-gauge steel Year after year of trouble-free operation SPRINGDALE Jerome LeRoy Gifford, age 67, died at his home April 18, 1988. Born in Springdale, Utah to John Jones and Fanny Crawford Gifford. A lifetime resident of Springdale, he served in the U.S. Army during World War II.

Graduated from Dixie College in 1948. Served as a naturalist for the Park Service. Loved the outdoors, photographing wildlife and plants in nearby Zion National Park, I r.orn.vrr.nuiuu.Trru.un I DUP0NT AUTOMOTIVE FINISH FACTORY BAKED ON WHITE ENAMEL YOUR CHOICE CI7C 1 1 YOU INSTALL WE INSTALL YOU INSTALL WE INSTALL 9x7 196 246 28(F 16x7 319" 36990 3468a 38990 w- Ohio; Mrs. Birrell (Mane) Hirschi of Fill- Geneva Workman more Mrs Leonard (Yvonne) P. Heaton, Mocassin, and Mrs.

Gerald (Pat) Black of Cedar City. Also surviving are 60 grandchildren and 57 great-grandchildren. She was preceded in death by twin daughters, Geneva and Eva. Funeral services will be held Monday at 11 a.m. in the Glendale Ward Chapel under the direction of McDougal Golden Rule Funeral Home.

Interment will be in the Glendale Cemetery. Copter chicks and donut dollies House begins debate on defense budget COMPARE 88 COLOR CHOICES NO RIVETS AUTOMOTIVE FINISH BEST PRICES 10 YEARS LOCAL EXPERIENCE-LICENSE am niuoons 990 Dixie Downs Road St. George, Behind 7-1 1 Store off Sunset INSTALLED ON YOUR PROPER JAMBS IN ST. GEORGE AREA She has two sisters and one brother; Mrs. Ezra Lytle of St.

George, Mrs Milford Barnum of Su-sanville, and Claude Bracken of St. George. She was one of the early pioneers of in Southern Utah. Services were held on April 19 in Las Vegas. She was interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery of Las Vegas under the direction of Palm Mortuary.

Sunnyvale, Calif, Loran of Cedar City, Utah, Reid of Arcadia, 12 grandchildren, 31 greatgrandchildren and two great-greatgrandchildren; one brother and two sisters: Lewis of Pocatello, Idaho, Mrs. Laura Clegg of Grace, Idaho, Mrs. Robert (Pearl) Goodwin of Soda Springs, Idaho. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, April 26, 1988, at 11 a.m. in the Hurricane Valley Mortuary Chapel.

Friends may call at the mortuary one hour prior to services. Interment will be in the St. George City Cemetery. bird watching and related activities. Member of the Audobon Society.

Survivors: one brother and five sisters Lorin G. Gifford of Richfield; Sylvia and Jewel A. Gifford, both of Springdale; Ellen Beacham of Santa Clara; Mabel Alice Hall of Las Vegas, Nev. and Inez Jorgensen of Centerville. Funeral services were held Saturday April 23, 1988 with interment in the Springdale City Cemetery.

competing points of view in Congress and at the Pentagon. The Air Force wants to put the 10-warhead MX missiles on railcars to obtain survivability enhancing mobility; saying that is far cheaper than building the mobile single-warhead "Midget-man." But there is strong support among many House Democrats for the Midgetman. When Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci submitted the budget, he kept $200 million in it for Midgetman to keep the program alive so the next president could decide its fate. He put in over $700 million for the MX program. But Aspin's committee opted instead to divide the total pot of money in half, giving each about $500 million.

Although the administration sought about $5 billion for the SDI effort, the House bill gave it $4 billion, and in addition to amendments dealing with the MX-Midgetman dispute, there will be attempts to both raise and lower the "Star Wars" spending level. There also will be a series of arms control amendments paralleling positions staked out in previous years by the House on nuclear testing, the SALT 2 treaty, and the "Star Wars" program and its conduct under the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty. Homes. Farms. Condos.

Lois, Apt. Bidgs. ivioDiie nomes. i ime-snaring unus and ALL types of Investment Properties AND any kind of BUSINESS Large or Small LOCALLY and All Across the U.S.A. and CANADA NO BROKERAGE FEES FREE Info on BUYING or SELLING Phone: 673-5384 776 Diagonal 10 St.

George, UT 84770 (AwMn NATL 1-800222 31 kx Wo iwl fhsociottsl Assistant iCompony Jeff Motby 673-6172 Resort Realty 90J Simply, Superbly Elegant "You're not the last person they see before they die," she says. Foster care can turn into a guarantee for heartbreak, as it did for the family and child in "Little Girl Lost." The television movie, to air on ABC Monday, April 25, 9-11 p.m. Eastern time, was taken from a true case and, with dramatic license and fake names, tells about a foster family that took in a neglected child when she was 1 year old, raised and loved i her. When the child, Telia, is 3 her father is granted visitation. The child fights the visits, suggests sexual abuse and has screaming nightmares before each trip to her father's trailer.

The response of the Children's Services agency is to suggest that Telia just wants attention and that the foster parents, the Bradys, are to blame. A supervisor tells the foster mother this is all her fault because she broke the first rule of foster parenting she became emotionally involved with the child. The unspoken question of Girl Lost" is what kind of system is it that blames the people who are raising a child for loving her? It is the kind of system that returns Telia to the natural father who neglected her and who she says sexually abused her. The Bradys find out that Children's Services was forced to remove Telia from her father's home after only two months because he abused her. Instead of returning her to the Bradys, who want to adopt her, the agency tries to cover its mistake by sending Telia to another foster home one that won't break the rules by loving an abused and needy child.

The Bradys fight to get Telia back and eventually they do but now she is withdrawn and disturbed. They must again try to heal the hurt child. Tess Harper and Frederic Forrest star as the Bradys, but the real star is little Marie Martin, a gorgeously appealing 5-year-old who plays Telia. WASHINGTON (UPI) Efforts to make it easier to close obsolete military bases and fights over the competing MX and Midgetman missile programs and "Star Wars" spending will highlight House defense bill debate starting Tuesday. With the overall spending level of $299.5 billion for fiscal 1989 pegged by last fall's budget summit, this year's bill is expected to consume about two weeks of floor debate, down from previous years and a sign the bill is far less contentious than in years past.

The bill represents a fourth straight year of declining defense budgets after the surge in the opening four years of the Reagan administration. Although the MX-Midgetman issue and the Strategic Defense Initiative spending level are items of longstanding dispute in defense bills, the base-closing issue is relatively new. Chairman Les Aspin, of the House Armed Services Committee and Rep. Dick Armey, R-Texas, are promoting the idea of creating a bipartisan commission to recommend military bases that should be closed. They want to set up streamlined procedures for closing the bases so the years and years now needed to conduct various studies and overcome the usual congressional reluctance to close a base, no matter how marginal its usefullness, can be chopped to just a few years.

Aspin, in an interview before the bill went to the floor, conceded the issue needs to be included in both the House and Senate bills to ensure its approval. If it goes into just one bill, pressure from members upset that a base in their district might be closed could derail the measure in the conference committee that will work out difference between the two bills. "If we're going to get this thing it's got to pass both houses. And lay it out and be honest and say, 'Here it is guys, are we serious about closing bases or aren't said Aspin. The MX-Midgetman issue involves competing weapons systems and 0 NEW YORK (UPI) Twenty years ago Americans saw what the war in Vietnam looked like on their television sets and they didn't like it.

Now television is trying to tell them what it felt like. It hurt. That's the story of "China Beach," to air on ABC in a two-hour premiere Tuesday, April 26, 9-11 p.m. Eastern time, before airing in its regular time period Wednesday, April 27, 10-11. Last fall CBS brought the fighting to the screen in the macho "Tour of Duty." "China Beach" is another part of the story, the woman's war of copter chicks, KoolAid kids and donut dollies.

The China Beach of the title is a medical-recreational facility adjacent to the U.S. base at Da Nang. It's where the first episode introduces the audience to nurse Colleen McMurphy (Dana Delany), sometimes emotionless with burnout, who has almost finished her tour and is desperate to wash away the blood. Wisecracking singer Laurette Barber (Chloe Webb) is part of a USO troup at China Beach to entertain the troops and Cherry White (Nan Woods) has come to Vietnam to be a donut dollie for the Red Cross and also to find her missing brother. There are others: the former Red Cross girl who says she knows what the boys want and gives it to them well, not exactly gives it to them; there's the dirty, brutalized GI who seldom talks but can still cry; the vulnerable black youth in charge of the morgue who can't get rid of the smell of formaldehyde; the sleazy consular official; the visiting ambassador-at-large.

"China Beach" sometimes seems like "M-A-S-H" without the wisecracks, a place of choppers and stretchers just beyond the action and the firefights, where people are safe enough to savor fully the horror going on beyond them. The ensemble approach provides a wide-angle, compassionate often ugly picture of Vietnam without the politics of the past. The camera and the script focus on the women the innocent donut dolly who learns a lot in her first days in Vietnam, the entertainer who comes to Vietnam full of flip talk and winds up singing to a dead man, and, most of all, the nurse who tells a doctor he treats wounds and burns with no person attached. Howard Miller Was $1,495 Now only 1,095 Elegant simplicity, describes this well designed Howard Miller floor clock crafted in solid oak. The Edmonton features: Multiple arch bonnet with an intricate embossed pattern Contoured reeded columns with turned column caps Brass dial with silvered chapter ring Cable driven, triple chime movement Suggested Retail Terms: 20 down One year Free Interest Free Delivery! oosive, Luxury golf course homesites Jj For the shrar pleasure Jb.

fc PLAZA SHEARS CLt Your Full Service Solon jM Coming May 1st pJ? 10 the new Phoenix Plaza Mall Oj" Eagle's Lmdffiig Holiday See Howard Miller's world at: Gem Jewelers 1 25 North main Cedar City 586-8464 St. George Golf Club at Bloomington Hills.

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