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Show Page HERALD, Provo, Utah, Monday, August 23, 14-- THE 1982 Community Notes Air Aces 4 Provoans Honored At Hill Graduate at BYU Hawaii Two veteran war pilots, who lost their lives in action during World II and Vietnam, were honored on Aug. 19 at Hill Air Force base with the base theatre being named in their honor. Major General Leo Marques, Commander of Hill AFB has notified the family of Stephen F. Stephensen of Riverton that his two sons, Mont F. and Mark L. Stephensen were comDEAUN SCHNEIDER EMMA LOU RICHARDS Bell Employees Tell Retirement Two long-tim- Mountain Bell e employees will retire on Friday after many years of service to the company. Emma Lou Richards will retire after more than 20 years with the company and Deaun (Ashton) Schneider will also retire after 33 years with the com- munications firm. Emma Lou began her career with Mountain Bell in Logan, Utah as an operator. She has also worked in the St. George, Richfield and Provo office. Her last year she worked as a Service Assistant. Now as she retires she plans to spend more time with her husband, Joel and her family. She also has many interests she wants to pursue. Friends and relatives are invited to attend a tea on Friday. It will be in the basement conference room at Mountain Bell, 74 East 100 North. The time is 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. Deaun's career has been highlighted by the many friends she has made in and out of the Company. She is looking forward to retirement in order to spend more time with her husband, Clarence, their son Russell and his wife Melinda, and her three grandchildren. A retirement tea is slated in her honor for her years of service. Friends and relatives are invited to attend from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the conference room at Mountain Bell, 75 East 100 North Provo. Buildings Have Tax Advantages New federal tax incentives provided by the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 for rehabilitating older buildings are now available, according to Wilson Martin, Coordinator for Historic Preservation Development, Utah State Historical Society. Investment tax credits ranging from 15 percent to 25 percent provide dramatic incentives for the rehabilita SALT LAKE CITY - From demonstrations to the lowdown on the football season, the second annual Young Alumni Day will have something for everyone including the kiddies Saturday. Aug. 28 at the University of Utah. hair-raisi- After last year's pilot program where 200 were expected at 2,000 showed up, "we decided to go for it again," says Jeff J. Jonas, Young Alumni Day chairman. The new program includes alumni who have attended the Univer memorated. The theater was renamed the Stephensen Memorial Theater. Capt. Mont Stephensen was a pilot in World War II. He flew a B26 Martin Marauder with the 599th Bombardment Group. He was lost in action leading his squadron over Geruany on Dec. 23, 1944. Col. Mark Stephensen was a recon- - Will Fill Law Chair Dr. Edward L. Kimball, a professor of law at Brigham Young University, has been named to fill the newly established Ernest L. Wilkinson Chair of Law in BYU's J. Reuben Clark Law School, President Jeffrey R. Holland has announced. "We congratulate Professor Kimball for his professional accomplishments which have led to this honor. Ed is a legal scholar of the first rank and has added significantly to the reputation the J. Reuben Clark Law School is acquiring. We thank the Wilkinson family and our generous donors for making it possible to establish this important chair in honor of Ernest L. Wilkinson," Holland said. Carl S. Hawkins, dean of the school, commented, "It's especially fitting tion of older that Professor Kimball be the first one to Martin, buildings. Rarely, according has there been a better time for invest- appointed to the chair because he shared President Wilkinson's commitment in older buildings. ment to professional excellence and work." A comprehensive seminar on the h'rd rehabilitation provisions of the He said Kimball's appointment will Economic Recovery Tax Act will be enable the professor to more freely held at the Hotel Utah in Salt Lake City his scholarly research and pursue tonight from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. professional development activities. The chair was named in honor of the late Dr. Ernest L. Wilkinson, seventh president of BYU and a nationally recognized Washington, D.C., attorney. Wilkinson served as president from 1951 to 1971 and was a key influence in establishing the law school at BYU. sity during the past 15 years. There are an estimated 25 000 such alumni along the Wasatch Front to whom invitations have been mailed, according to Kerry and Young Belnap, director of Alumni programs for the U of U Alumni Association. "We're excited about this opportunity to bring younger alumni back to the campus to demonstrate that the 'U' can be of continuing importance in their lives," says Jonas, a former Ute basketball star. "We're also extremely pleased by last year's response." Kimball has written some 40 articles and books and is known in professional circles for his expertise and innovative teaching programs in the areas of evidence, criminal law and procedure, and criminal trial practice. He has served as editor in chief of the Utah Law Review, clerk to Justice J. Allan Crockett of the Utah Supreme Court, faculty editor of the Montana Law Review, consultant to the American Bar Foundation Series on the Administration of Criminal Justice in the United States, and consultant to the U.S. Bureau of of Wisconsin Extension Course of Jail Ad- Prisons-Universit- y Iff" I CIA m MARK STEPHENSEN MONT STEPHENSEN captured and held prisoner in North Viet Nam for six years. Col. Stephensen is survived by his wife Vickie and four children. The brothers have relatives living in Utah naissance pilot in Vict Nam. He flew with the 11th Tactical Reconnaissance squadron out of Udorn AFB, Thailand. He and his systems officer Capt. Gary Sigler were on their 95th mission when they were shot down. Capt. Sigler was Provo was well represented at the commencement ceremonies at the Hawaii campus of Brigham Young University. Four Provoans were among the graduating class that included students from eight states and 22 countries. Linda J. Ngarupe received a bachelors of science degree in elementary education, Kim A. Garrett received a bachelors of science degree in restaurant and hotel management, Lisa M. Marchese received a bachelors of science degree in business management, and Charles D. Fillmore received an associates of science degree in travel management. County. Matheson Will Kimball income-producin- g Utes Tell Plans For Young Alumni Day Meetings, honors and community events for Utah Valley People 8 Check Library Plans in Utah The Utah Plan for Library and Information Services will be presented to Governor Scott M. Matheson by the Utah State Library Board on Thursday, at the Governor's Mansion at 5:00 p.m. The completion of this plan by the Utah Advisory Committee on Library and Information Services for the Utah State Library Board is a landmark in the implementation of the recommendations of the 1979 Utah Governor's Conference on Library and Information Services. Input from representatives of all segments of Utah's library community and from citizens throughout Utah was used in the development of this state plan. The document addresses needs, goals, objectives, and responsibilities for improving effective library and information services to Utah residents. 3 EDWARD L. KIMBALL FOR SALE BY OWNER ministration. He currently is a member of the Test Development Committee (Evidence) for the Multistate Bar Examination, the Utah Evidence Code Revision Committee, the Utah Board of Pardons and Paroles and the Committee to Draft Criminal Procedure Rules for the Utah Federal District Court. Kimball has served on a number of other professional committees in Wisconsin and Ai 1 If H n mm Utah. The professor obtained his bachelor's and LL.B. degrees from the University of Utah and his LL.M. and S.J.D. degrees from the University of Penn- fi sylvania. He was a Bicentennial Fellow in Criminal Law and Administration at the University of Pennsylvania, a Social Science Research Council Fellow at the University of Wisconsin, and a Rockefeller Fellow, also Wisconsin. Kimball taught at Montana State University and the University of Wisconsin before joining the BYU faculty as a professor of law in 1973. He was born in Safford, Ariz., and is a son of Spencer W. and Camilla Eyring Kimball. He is well known among LDS Church members as of biographical works on his mother and his father, who is president of the 722 So. 880 West Provo Four 840 Sq. Ft. Units All Presently Occupied ore carpeted and air conditioned, with quality finish and appliancts. Grounds art landscaped, drivts and parking lot art paved. $1 19,000.00. Excellent terms available lo qualified buyers with acceptable down payment. Present all offers. Units Contact David Stone or Linda Reilly 224-111- 1 0 Church. Changes Told Domino's For Receiving Pizza Delivers. Social Security Legislation enacted in 1981 made a basic change in when a person can first become eligible to receive Social Security monthly benefits, a Social Security representative said recently. People now becoming eligible for benefits can receive a benefit only for months they are eligible throughout the entire month. This means that unless a person was bom on the 1st or 2nd day of the month, he or she cannot get a benefit for the month they become 62. The first month they can receive a benefit is tor the month after the month they reach 62. This provision also applies to a wife or husband and children receiving benefits on a living person's Social Security record. The spouse or child must be eligible throughout the entire month to get a benefit. This mainly applies to stepchildren, since the marriage of the child's natural parent must have taken place one full year before the child can get benefits. Henager Student Achieves Accountancy Stephen J. Chesnut of Stevens Henager College has successfully completed the requirements for accreditation in the field of accountancy. The Accreditation Council for Accountancy, a corporation sponsored by the National Society of Public Accountants, awarded accredited status to Stephen J. Chesrut on August 1, 1982. To achieve accreditation Stephen J. Chesnut had to pass a formal examination administered by the Accreditation Council. The purpose of the Council's accreditation program is to provide a method tor the recognition oi qualified individuals who are engaged In the practice andor study of accounting. The cornerstones of the program are a form of testing for all applicants ana the maintenance of accredited status through mandatory continuing education requirements. non-prof- it o Time for lunch? i Lunch need not be the same old thing. Domino's Pizza offers a choice. We use only the best ingredients you get a noticeably superior pizza ! 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