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Show 14 Obituaries Wallace Ferguson. Kl died .Wednesday. March 26. 2KI8.. He was born 20, 1920 to Leroy l.thd Ferguson. He grew up in the Provo area and enlisted in the US. Navy during WWII. After serving his country, he married Alene Stalling!,. His parents preceded him in death. He is survived by his wife Alene and 4 children, 3 sisters-Sherr(Bill) Jones, Wanda (Grant) Farrer, Gloria (Verl) Mott, and brother Ron (Verlene) Ferguson, A private burial will take place on Friday. V y 1 John Michael Bob Thomas Father. Kate joined our family on Jury 15, 2006. From day one, she brought so much joy and happiness and filled our lives with much love. Kate endured many physical ailments in her short life with great courage, strength and love. She taught us more in 21 months than one could learn in a lifetime. We've always said that Kate had the biggest heart of anyone we know, and physically she did, but her little body just couldn't compensate for it. Kate spent numerous months at Primary Children's Medical Center where she became well acquainted with the many doctors and nurses who fought valiantly to prolong M. John Michael Laub, known as Mike to some and John to others, passed away March 23, 2008 at the age of 50 in Utah. John was born August 15, 1957 and .' spent his early years in St. George, Utah. In his late teens John moved north to American Fork, Utah to a program for the challenged. It was in this program he met Marianne Porter, they were sealed April 16, 1989 in Temple. Throughout the years John competed in many Special Olympics winning many medals. John loved to tease people and make them laugh. He was a very caring, sweet man who loved to socialize and make friends wherever he went. John is survived by his wife Marianne, his mother Mary Jayne, two sisters, Gerri, and Jay-n- , and five brothers, Pat, Ralph, Tom, Jack and Sam. He was preceded in deat h by his f at her Charlie and his youngest brother '2 f.l ( William. Funeral service will be held at the LDS chapel on 1289 E. 300 S. Provo, LT at 2:00 p.m. on Monday, March 31, 2008. A viewing will be held at 1:00 p.m. at the same location. Online condolences may be given at www. serenicare.com. DEATH NOTICE Samuel Roy McCluskey, 19 woman who devoted her life to the service of others, always ready with a project that engaged and stretched the talents of her children and offering instruction then stepping back so that learning could take place, never cross, easily entreated, selfless, extends ing her reach to countless friends, neighbors, even strangers. Her husband, children, grandchildren and friends all call her "Blessed." Born February 1, 1923 to John E. and Ellen Pitman Harris, M. Afton Felt passed away peacefully at home surrounded by her children and grandchildren on March 25, 2008. Afton spent her early years in Provo in what she always recalled was an idyllic childhood where, despite the hardships of the Great Depression, she "never once had the impression of being poor or in anyway deprived of any needful thing." Her family moved to Salt Lake City where she graduated from East High in 1941. That Fall, as a freshman at B YU, she caught the eye of the Student Body President, Paul E. Felt, who was convinced he had been played when, following directions she had given him to her home, he ended up at the main gate of the State Prison in Afton had conveniently neglected to tell him that her father was the Warden. In 1943, now an officer in the US Navy, Paul rushed to Salt Lake City on a leave, found Afton, who was in a program at Holy Cross Hospital, and proposed to her. They were married on June 1, 1943 in the Salt Lake Temple by Harold B. Lee. Early in their marriage Afton and Paul decided to have a large family, welcoming eleven children, and then adopting another to make it an even dozen. First and foremost she devoted her life to her chil i Writers Guild of America spokesman Gregg M it chell said Mann died Tuesday. The cause of death was not given. Mann also won multiple Emmys, including one in 1973 for "The Marcus-Nelso- J.. Mur- n ders," which created a maverick New York police detective named Theo Kojak. The film, starring 1 elly Savalas. was spun off into the TV series ' Kojak." In a career spanning more than 50 years as a writer, director and producer, Mann returned repeatedly to morally conscious themes, doing films for television on such subjects as Martin Luther King Jr., human rights advocate Simon Weisenthal and the 1 eamsters. "Abby was brought along by great producers like Herbert Brodkui, but his passion was his own. From his earliest days as a writer, he was guided by a moral compass that never wavered," said Del Reisman, former president of the Writers Guild of America, West, and a longtime friend. Mann was a struggling television writer in the 1950s when he became fixated on Abby Mann left stands hi on otl'i j''m photo in StniUt Mvucn.i ' i Awards in t hi AprilJK Lo- (Canada), Cedar City, finally settling in Provo in 1957 when Paul took a position at BYU. From 1971 to 74 Afton actively served alongside Paul in his call to preside over the Southwest Indian Mission in Arizona. After returning from 6 months living in Jerusalem in 1980 Afton spent several years serving at the Missionary Training Center, focusing particularly on sister missionaries. In 1989 Paul and Afton took on the challenge of presiding over the Hawaii Temple Visitors Center, the second busiest of all the LDS Visitor Centers. Afton was preceded in death by her husband of 56 years and an infant daughter Betty Naomi. Afton is survived by 1 1 of her mark, Montgomery (lift ami 1994 interview. "People want- ed to sweep the issue under the rug." Mann persisted, and producer-director Stanley Kramer made the film with a cast that included Spencer Tracy, Burt Lancaster, Marlene Dietrich, Judy Garland, Richard Wid- - children: Paul E. Felt of Perth, Australia, John M. Felt of Philadelphia, Yvonne Jordan of Cedar City, Marilynn Forsyth of Fairfax, Virginia, Larry H. Felt of Alpine, Utah, Ronald G. Felt of Salt Lake i All-ma- I t I '.( 8?a the Daily Herald. ASSOCIATED ; 1 liieji-quaii- id Very High Earning Potential! ahoratofv in lis own research suggests ihe W'-s- cuili'd heal hv Tv up a lo more'. y !' nriitj kmh! of degrs the century, ilcpeiuliug on ti.ie level.of greenhouse gas '. A I !i" report. "I loiter and Drier; '1 he West's Changed Cfi nia.l",'-- crui'i kepi hv NOAA's. Western Hegioiril Clanale ("enter in Ren. ,'ev, " ha! soul '(.Is ahoiit right ," i he acting director, '. iMii. said. IvclJv in t s 'It's h" n it i:i .;t f. .i the past iiryeal .. .i;i a "ool pi't'iod in the I"7i)s. We've been decidedly above average. You could pul an exclamation on it," he said Redmond lias made calculations similar to the report's rise, which has meant fewer suhero nights to control th'' population of mountain pine beetles devastating Colorado's lodgepole pines. At first, he said, "1 didn't know whether to trust these numbers or not." They came from a network o! about 2.000 thermometers across the West from airports to weather hobbyists' backyards - recording lows and highs since the late ISOOs. , l pos-ah- Tedinology Provo 377-522- i eiais-ston- i ( J in this region," said Martin a meteorologist at the NOAA-funde- d Earth System 9 I i-- report. very detectable warming fe rtfimof Arts AcaJemp Denial 340 ( Research der. Colo. Climate change researchers are hesitant to ascribe a single cause for the warming, but they agree it's happening. ''By and large, there is a Training in a Real Dental Lab! 1355 N. Univ Ave I'll A SriC!(.( ('( John Rogen hit renni t Now, a new calculation of Become a Dental Lab Technician in 9 months! v. -- ! PRESS e 703-- : 4 r; mem a! produce Actional o! vl Aea'r n horn Alin Mann Aodnian iirMtibilrlpliu 4t in c l. hT. thesoiVofa A' immigrant. He grow up in atough. factory ; neighborhood where' he said he ahva s felt jike an uWskH .1 le began wi lling p'avsat Temple I iniv.ersii.-- and cv York 'nivci sity: ". A fler three years in the A t ni lie began willing; scripts, lor, television's ( ioki (' n v TV 'Age wlicn dramas vfi in demand His credits included "Luv Y'ld.'o b'atr" ilavhoase nip a,., 'siitdiu Kuv aniosn; tr?n' n mm iCANY at CUFFROSE . (435) of !'n '( said Stephen Saunders, the organization's president in Louisville, Colo. The Natural Resources Defense Council funded and helped compile the Hands-o- n ia v rung h cans' government temperature data shows that over the past five SALT LAKE CITY years, average annual temperAround the same time the atures in the Colorado River basin American West started heatthe heart of the West have risen by 2.2 degrees, ing up five years ago, Colorado started losing its lodgepole pine or about twice as fast as the A forests to a beetle infestation. global rate. "The population built up The forthcoming report is rapidly and exploded. It takes from the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization, a coalition out the mature trees," said of local governments, busiAguayo, an entomologist nesses and others wot kin for the Colorado State Forest to protect the climate. It says Service, which estimates that about 60 percent of the lodge-pol- e the West is healing up pines have turned red and than any other region h ine continental U.S. wiih mare brown. "Now we're seeing a new catastrophic wildfires fimw& the consequences. carpet of forest coming up," she said. "It's already begun. We are Scientists can't be certain already seeing the effects, and scientists are telling us it's goglobal warming is to blame, but the evidence is damning. ing to get markedly worse." California. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, 1 April 2008 at 1 p.m. at the Heatheridge 4th Ward Chapel, 620 East Heather Road, Orem, Utah Friends may call that same morning from 10 a.m. to 12 noon for a viewing prior to services. Interment, Provo City Cemetery. 1 Call Berg Mortuary (801) for directions. Condolences may be sent to infobergmortuary.com. WHHOMES from $204, ill's )ne o made-for-T- Paul Foy THE advertising message can reach more than in r1; 1: Research shows climate change affecting trees, streams in the Wesi n CityJakarta, Indonesia, Jessie of Atlanta, Georgia, Kathleen Covey of Orem, Utah, Tom E. Felt of Maplet on, Utah; Tammy Williams of Atlanta, Georgia; Windy Stewart of Rapid City, So. Dakota; 54 grandchildren; 51 and younger brother Robert Harris of Culver City, great product can determine the size of your business, 92,000 readers every Sunday ill!' inirjiA'Saiaua" i " i;)di; i merit i ied ChAAAv t'nstlirf Aunv i the postwar Nuremberg trials that brought to justice the top surviving leaders of the Nazi regime. His "Judgment at Nuremberg" had become a successful drama on television, and against all advice, he was determined to convert it into his first movie script. "A lot of people didn't want it done,' he commented in a but it's the foundation of customers that keep it standing Your ':, w lie Sht! hi Weisr " earn tory" ' lip Jackie' IVesSvl S' .. Maximilian Scheli; ".liidgmehr at Nuremberg" was nomi- - ; nated for 11 Academy AwaroA and won Oscars for Scheli and Mann. ( Widmark; 'who plaved a U.S. prosecutor, died Mon-- . day at 93:). "I believe t hat a writer ; worth his salt at ailhas.anoii- ligation not only to entertain but to comment on the at Id in which he live-s- not only to comment, but maybe have a... shot at reshaping the world." Mann said when lie accented his Oscar. His other movies included'; "A Child Is Waiting" (starring Lancaster and Garland); about retarded children; "Ship of Fools" (with Vivien Leigh, Simone Signoret. Jose Ferrer and Lee Marvin) involving human interplay on an ocean liner; and "Report to the Commissioner" (featuring Michael Moriarty) about police corrup turn. Finding film studios increasingly unwilling to tackle controversial subjects. Mann returned to television. After creating "Kojak." which aired until 1978, he wrote and directed the I'mniy nominated miniseries "King." a biography .of Martin Luther King Jr. movies: Other "Skag" (1980), which became a short-ruseries for Karl Maiden; "Murderers Among r A i iWQ'f'iiv long-runnin- g gan, Salt Lake City, Calgary ' I at 80. dren and then to their children. With the War over, Afton and Paul began their adventures of setting up homes in 5 adapted screenplay for "Judgment at Nuremberg." has died Afton Felt A AS LOS A NCI LLS Abby Mann, writer of socially conscious scripts for movies and television and w inner of the 1961 Academy Award for Colorado Springs, CO; many numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and friends. Funeral services will be held Saturday March 29, 2008, 11:00 am at the Cedar Hollow 5th Ward, 1900 North 1050 East Lehi, LT. View-ing- s will be held Friday March 28, 2008 from 6:00 - 8:00 pm Wing Mortuary 118 East Main, Lehi, UT and Saturday, March 29 from 9:00 - 10:30 am at the church Interment will be in the Fillmore City Cemetery, Fillmore, LT. nurse-trainin- g month old infant son of Roy and Laura Swensen McCluskey of Orem, passed away March 26, 2008. Services are pending and will be announced by Sundberg-Olpi- n Mortuary. THt her life. She had many, many friends there who adored her and we are so grateful for the interest they took in Kate and the wonderful care they provided. This sweet bttle angel will be missed by many loving family members including her parents, Bryan and Marcae Rosenvall Lehi, UT; grandparents, Alan and Lori Roper, Fillmore, UT and James and Katherine Rosenvall, Provo, LT; great grandparents, Edward A.E. Rich and Florence "Pete" Rich, American Fork, UT and Roland and RomaChris-tensen- , Our sweet little Kate "Kater Bugs" returned home last night. March 25. 2O08. to be with her loving Heavenly Laub lovo, Abby Mann dies al H) Kate Rosenvall Wallace Ferguson t Oscar-winniim'sc'i'iHMmrit- cM' www.FineArtsDentalAcademy.tom AVOID THE "DKA I II TAX" FREE REPORT RKVKALS HOW! Limited Time 0ffer f Don't Fay Needless of Losing What I Taxes or Put Your l amilv At Risk Worked So Hard to l.aru! Y ou've CALL Leave Toll-IVe- e Ri)k-I.aw- L Receive a FREE wrth ttw pofctust trf a S9nturt Of Ultimjrt $CQ9S . Coupon mu be prrvmtKl al timf ot ilnmg. NMvaldonnpnptkxiMrocenimpuTChain. Ccck ycer Pck9 KtMtw purchaw of 6 Shwi or r i , CnrtcoinbwiotMcoupom(Hijlo(frv fnrS epointment t&iiy at wwvJ-.- Jik! ; r Ondc Pt&tge. Kiticy. xc IVovo iinil S.ilt I I'll V Custom, Quality iriiritiff it. iii.i I. c Selection of Colors Shies NPWAU ( "n I'l'iriiA'irAi n Hih pi' ' Provo. I tah 374 0580 fcfdeutt. remoCodr si Is K. ii 725 South 900 East Value in audio iessajY 21 hours f Mil Receive a FREE 11x1 4 Wall Portrait ' PC Brrnton . ii It :. Enpim; 4D6U8 sincel j II |