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Show Darrel T. Martin Darrel T. Martin, 52, ol Sprlngville, died Thursday at Veteran's Hospital in Palo Alto, Calit, of complications following surgery, He was born June 23, 1321 in Ogden, to Lawrence and Lizzie Shipley Martin. He married Helen Kueuzi on Aug. 13, 1951 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs, Allan (Monica) Lee, Orem. Funeral services were held Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the Spring-ville Spring-ville Fourth LDS Ward Chapel with Bishop Howard Ivory conducting. con-ducting. BurialwasintheSpring-ville BurialwasintheSpring-ville Evergreen Cemetery. Frank C. Cordner Frank C.Cordner, 73, of 2919 Connor Street, Salt Lake City, died Friday morning of cancer at Veterans Hospital in Salt Lake City. He was born April 15, 1900, in Orem, to William James and Edna Banks Cordner. He married mar-ried Elsie Davis on Dec. 8, 1926, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple, Survivors include three brothers and one sister, Jess Cordner, Tom Cordner, Steven Cordner, all Provo; and Mrs. Anton (Reva) Rohbock, Orem, among others. Funeral services were held at noon in Garden Heights Ward Chapel, Salt Lake City. Burial was in East Lawn Memorial Park, Provo. milll THEATRES r "EASILY THE BEST MOVIE SO FAR THIS YEAR!" N.Y. TIMES "SENSATIONALLY FICIY!" -l.A.TIMES Where were you in '62 ? ENDS TONIGHT Redford & Streisand "Way We Were" 7:30-9:30 m ASS FOX I II VII Vlj I Vf" Advanced Solid State Circuitry - 4 Matched Speakers ! Solid State Dual Channel f Separate speaker Jacus - Accurate iracKing i one & & Arm - Removable. snaD-on. hineed Chest Cover, Molded Textured Cabinet - Reg, if 59.00 t JUI United 705 North State-Orem (3 Parley VerDell Lunt Dies: Services Held Funeral services were held Monday for Parley VerDellLunt, 62, of 96North 800 West, whodied Friday at his home" of emphysema. He was born Sept. 8, 1911 in Diaz Mexico, to Thomas and Etta E.Johnson Lunt. He married Lasca Chamberlain on April 14, 1930, in Summit. Later the marriage was solemnized in the St. George LDS Temple. He was an Elder inOremThird LDS Ward. He lived in Cedar City until 1942 when he moved to Payson. In 1952 ne movea to Redlands, Calif., to start the first Ettie Lee Home for Boys. He worked with his wife as home parents for the boys for the last 20 years. He retired in 1971 and moved to Orem. He is survived by his wife; one son and one daughter, Mel-vin Mel-vin V. Lunt, Carson City, Nev.; Mrs. Boyd (Geraldine L.) Coll-ings, Coll-ings, Orem; his mother of St. George; 18 grandchildren; one brother, Alvin Lunt, Las Vegas, Nev.; Ziona Rigby, Cedar City. Services were held in the Orem Third Ward chapel, under the direction of Bishop Lyle Cooper. Burial was in the Payson City cemetery. ill- fHI 4 'Bf S W10 NOUlM !J3 v:s? 374 5535 Amplipher. Quality Controlled and C YWiUU Outlet blocks North of k mart) DUnnrnnh .J&f if INSURANCE COMPANY 930 South State, W - Orem-Ph. 224-0710 THERE ARE ONLY 2 WAYS TO RECORD THE PASSAGE OF TIME STOP IN-WE'VE RESERVED ONE OF OUR CALENDARS FOR YOU! Florence Jenkins Florence Evans Jenkins, 78, of Provo, died Friday at Utah Valley Hospital of natural causes. She was born Sept. 24, 1895 in Spanish Fork, to Charles A, and Emma Warner Evans. She married Eugene H. Jenkins on May 16, 1913, in Provo. He died Sept. 3, 1959. Survivors include one son in Orem, Maurice Jenkins. Funeral services were held in the BergDrawingChapelinProvo Tuesday at 11 a.m. Burial was in Provo City Cemetery. Funeral services were held in the Berg Drawing Chapel in Provo City Cemetery. AlfrpH I PafP '"CU L. TdUC Alfred L. Pace, 89, long-time Thistle resident, died Friday in a Provo hospital of natural causes. He was born Dec. 14, 1884 in Thistle, the son of John Alma and Susanna Taylor Pace. He married Sadie Stagg Nov. 13, 1907 In the Salt Lake Temple. She died Nov. 11, 1973. Survivors include a son, Harvey Har-vey A. Pace, of Orem. Funeral services were conducted con-ducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. in the Payson Third Ward Chapel. Bur-rial Bur-rial was in Provo CityCemetery. I BERG jMORTttARY SERVICESV 373-1841 i HELENA VESTA WARNER GEASE - Funeral services will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel. Friends call at the mortuary prior to services. Interment Provo City Cemetery. MELVIN RICHARD BROOKS Services were held Friday at 11 a.m. in the Edgemont 8th ward chapel, with interment in Prvo City Cemetery. DORA M. COLLINGS - Services were held at 2 p.m. in the Berg Mortuary, with interment in Provo City Cemetery. FLORENCE EVAN JENKINS -Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at 11 a,m. at the Berg Drawing Chapel of Provo. Interment Inter-ment Provo City Cemetery. ANNA DALE 0. BANDLEY -Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Interment Provo City Cemetery. OREM OLIVER AGAR SUTCH -Services were held in the Berg Mortuary, with interment in Tim-panagos Tim-panagos Memorial Gardens. GLYDA M, HERBERT - Funeral services were held Saturday at 10 a.m. in the St. Francis Catholic Cath-olic Church. Interment Orem City Cemetery. JERRY JACOBS ECKLES - Services Ser-vices were held Friday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Mortuary, with interment in Orem CityCemetery. CityCem-etery. PROVO EMIL K. NIELSEN - Funeral services will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. in the Rivergrove 1st Ward Chapel, 780 N. 700 W. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary Wednesday evening from 6-8, and at the Rivergrove church prior to services on Thursday. Interment Provo City Cemetery. CARLOS HENRY ORTONserv-ces ORTONserv-ces will be held Thursday (today) (to-day) at 2 p.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo prior to services. Interment in Santaquin City Cemetery. .1 r i Ruth Story Murphy Saturday Rites Held For Ruth Murphy Ruth Elizabeth Story Murphy died Thursday in a Salt Lake hospital. She was 73 years of age, and resided at 410 East Center Street. Funeral services were held Saturday at 1 p.m. in the Sundberg-Olpin Mortuary chapel, Burial was in the Maple Grove Cemetery in Hudson, Michigan. She was born Sept. 4, 1900 in Hillsdale, Mich., a daughter of Charles and Nellie Steoeson Story. She married Clinton Burneson and they later were divorced. She married Clarence Murphy in Carson City, Nev., in 1948. Mrs. Murphy was a Methodist and she and her husband moved from San Francisco to Orem in 1966, She was an addressograph operator. Survivors include her husband and one son, James Burneson, Orem; one sister and one brother, Clyde Story, Wayne, Mich., and Mrs. Marie Rickerd, Ann Arbor, Mich. Dora Collings Dora Moose mann Collings, 89, Provo, died December 11 at Utah Valley Hospital of causes incident to age. Survivors include six sons and three daughters, W. Clark Collings, Coll-ings, Lindon; FerronL. Collings, Thoral M. Collings andMrs.Nola C. Briggs, all of Orem. Funeral services were held Friday at 2 p.m. inBergDrawing Room Chapel, Provo. Burial was inPr o vo C ity C e metery. DprtlO FlStlC ocl uc tVdllO SALINA ' Bertie Gates Evans, 87, of Salina, died at the Timpanogos Nursing Home in Orem of causes, incident to age. She was the sister of Mrs. c.l. Gladys) Spaugy, of Orem. She was born March 13, 1886 in Salina to George S. and Elizabeth Eliz-abeth McKee Gates. On Nov. 14, 1905 she married DavidE. Evans in Richfield, and he died May 18, 1965. She attended Spanish Fork and Salina schools. Funeral services were held Saturday at noon in the Salina Third Ward chapel. Burial was in Pioneer Cemetery, Salina. Train Crash Injures Two Orem Men Gary L. Anderson, 425 S. 800 E. and Harold Eugene Calder, 538 N. 640 W. sustained injuries December 13, 1973, when their car collided with a train at 400 South in Orem. They were treated and released re-leased from Utah Valley Hos-' pital. REETINGS We couldn't ask better audience. Thanks for your o Appliance "Wl SERVICE Alt APPtlANCa- Mountain Bell Tips On Holiday Calls For Mountain Bell, Christmas ranks with Mother's Day as the busiest long distance calling day of the year. And, with the fuel shortage creating travel problems prob-lems for many people it may be even busier than usual this year. So, dont wait until December 25th, to make your long distance dis-tance holiday calls. You could get caught in the Christmas rush. Even though the Bell System is adding 3,000 more telephone circuits cir-cuits to meet the demand, some people will find the circuits busy when they try to call Christmas morning or evening. Especially with traveling limited for fuel shortages and cancelled airline flights. We expect more than 12 million mil-lion interstate long distance calls on Christmas Day and even more local calls or overseas caUs," says Mountain Bell district dist-rict manager Merrill Hymas. For holiday callers, here are a few tips that can save you money and help speed your calls: First, dial your own calls. They are faster and less expensive ex-pensive than operator-handled calls. Next, December 22 and 23 fall on Saturday and Sunday this year, and weekend long distance rates are even lower than the holiday rates on Christmas Day. The circuits are also less busy than Christmas Day. Your call should go through faster on the weekend. It could help you keep the holiday spirit through the holidays. If you need the telephone number num-ber of a friendor relative, call Directory Assistance before the rush, so you will have the number num-ber ready when circuits are busier on the holiday. Directory Assistance for any city in Utah is 1-555-1212. Universal Directory Dir-ectory Assistance for any city in the U.S. is l-(area code) -555-1212. If you must call on Christmas Day, do so before 8 a.m. or in midafternoon. Your chances for completing the call will be greater. great-er. And, if you encounter a busy signal or have to wait awhile to get anoperator, remember, more than 500 Mountain Bell operators and 68 other Mountain Bell employes em-ployes will be giving up Christmas Christ-mas with their families so you-can you-can be in touch with yours by telephone. Low Rate Of Default At BYU The rate of default on federally guaranteed student loans in the United States is more than 12 times higher than the rate of default de-fault at Brigham Young University, Univer-sity, a recent survey showed. Dr. Robert W. Spender, dean of admissions and records, said the percentage of defaulted BYU student bank loans is only six tenths of one percent (.06), while the national rate is approximately approx-imately 7.4 percent. The total number of loans received re-ceived by BYU students exceeds 15,000, Dr. Spencer said. Loans, average about $1000 each. An official of the U.S. Office of Education said he was unable to understand why BYU students have such a low default rate in comparison with the national averages, and commended the BYU student body on its integrity. I am proud of the record of integrity compiled by Brigham Young University students In their conscientious repayment of loans," said BYU President Dallin H. Oaks. for a support. Medical Progr Vhrhinq A prepaid medical program, instituted this year for the first time at the Brigham Young University Student Health Center, Cen-ter, has resulted in increased use of the Center by students while keeping it financially sound, according to Dr. Cloyd C. Hof-heins, Hof-heins, director. More than 10,000 of BYU's 25,000 students purchased the plan which provides all services at the Health Center for a flat fee of $7.50 per semester without with-out additional charges for each separate service, such as tests, prescriptions, and X-rays. Dr. Hofheins said the volume of visits this year increased 30 percent in September and 32 percent in October, and it was noted that 66 percent of the visits were by those who had purchased the plan. Prescriptions were up 70 percent per-cent in September and 78 percent in October, laboratory tests up 18 percent in September and 43 percent in October, and X-rays up 59 percent in September and 9 percent in October. Dr. Hofheins said a survey in recent years showed that about 50 percent of the students were putting off treatments until they returned to their homes on holidays hol-idays or at the end of the year. "Now with the financial barrier bar-rier removed, they are coming to the Center instead of taking their ailments home," he observed. ob-served. "We are offering more services ser-vices to more people and are still financially viable," he said. Gerald Ingalsbe Earns Masters Degree MUNCIE, Ind.--Gerald Edwin Ingalsbe, 875 North 50 West, has completed scholastic work for a master's degree from Ball State University. He has been studying at the U.S. Air Force BaseatZweibruecken, Germany, in the Ball StateAir Force-sponsored graduate program pro-gram with a major in executive development in p8blic services. .The aim of this and other Ball State Air Force-sponsored graduate study programs is to aid those in the military and supporting support-ing personnel to make a transition to civilian employment when they leave the military, or to assist them in current military assignments. assign-ments. The programs are offered at 16 bases in five European countries. All stdents who have .'completed .'com-pleted their scholastic work toward to-ward degrees since May, 1973, will be eligible to participate in graduation ceremonies scheduled for May 11, 1974, at Wiesbaden, Germany, or in graduation ceremonies cer-emonies in May or Augst on the Ball State Campus. GREAT GIFTS FOR YOUR GENTLEMEN CAMEL BLAZERS PLAID TROUSERS GANT SHIRTS BOW TIES SWEATERS PARKAS SUITS COATS "The Christmas I f 375-3900 -"' T Y"-' v.. , zrzz Orera-Geneva Times i i ' f -J PICTURED IS MRS. Nanette Theobald demonstrating hair comb ing with subject, Allan Laird. BYU Makes Population Study Trained leadership is more important to the growth of a community than is its agricultural agricul-tural base. This is one of the primary conclusions drawn by Dr. John R. Christiansen, professor of sociology at Brigham Young University, after he directed a research team in four Western states to find out what causes population growth or decline in communities. Sociologists generally agree that at least two factors agricultural agri-cultural technology and transportation trans-portation - communications-must communications-must not be below a minimal level of development before communities can be formed. Other writers suggest that an adequate water supply is another necessary cause of community growth, Dr. Christiansen said. In the testing of a variety of sociological theories, the research re-search team found that three important ingredients are necessary for the growth of a community: (1) well-trained leadership; (2) proper ties with the outside world in both government govern-ment and social organization; and (3) harmonious working together of people within the community. .The,. team studied four communities" com-munities" that were nearly the same size (about 11,000) as noted in the 1970 census: Ar-tesia, Ar-tesia, N.M.;Durango, Colo.; Rock Springs, Wyo.; andCasaGrande, Ariz. Artesia had a 14 percent decline de-cline in population from. 1960 to 1970, while Durango experienced exper-ienced about a 2 percent drop. On the other hand, Rock Springs showed a 12 12 percent population popu-lation increase in the decade while Casa Grande increased almost al-most 27 percent during the same period, Dr. Christiansen reported. re-ported. We found little support for the theory that a strong agriculture agricul-ture base is a prerequisite for the growth of communities. ... w m OPEN TIL 9. December 20, 1973 .V. Scera Park Holds Seminar Scera Park Elementary in Orem is the scene of many experiments ex-periments and much success. Approximately one hundred children have been involved in a special Self-Concept Seminar. The seminar is headed by the school's Resource teacher, Mrs. Nanette R. Theobald. The children meet once a week to discuss and learn about themselves. One entire session was on grooming. The children's hair, hands, face, and teeth were washed by teacher's assistants. These assistants are from the Brigham Young University under the direction of Dr. Robert W. Laird. The children also saw films and participated in role playing activities. ac-tivities. They learn to understand under-stand such feelings as self-confidence and self-importance. Carl Purcell Art Display Is Rewarding Carl Purcell was born in FiUmore, Utah, and now lives in Springville. He attended Utah State University, Arizona State, BFA (Bachelor of Fine Arts Program) Brigham Young University, and is now completing complet-ing the MFA (Master of Fine Arts) at BYU. He has travelled all over the Southwest, Mexico, the East Coast, Germany, Vietnam, Europe Eur-ope and Australia. He is married mar-ried and has four children. The water color 'Back Road which Carl presented to the City Center was painted on the spot one day as he was travelling through the Provo River bottoms. The chaotic patterns formed by an old house and trailer among the trees attracted him. vmmx - gurreit clothing co. Storekeeper for Gentlemen SJI&.SWeiifl 22M7M |