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Show Page THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Thursday, September 4 2, 1982 Utah Valley Brief Candidates Midway Yodels of Swiss Days Midway, Wasatch County's "Swiss village in the Utah Alps," begins its annual Swiss Days celebration on Friday and Saturday. The Swiss Market opens at 10 a.m. with a chuckwagon breakfast at the town square. The Swiss Days 10,000 Meter Run begins at 8 a.m. in front of the Town Hall; registration from 7 a.m. A refreshments are and finish-lin- e Friday, with events continuing through fee. in the included JenMax registration include midnight. Highlights Another parade is scheduled for 10 sen playing favorite Swiss tunes on the with a full slate of organ at 1 p.m., followed the famous a.m. Saturday events throughout the day including a Swiss yodeler, Arthur Brogli at 2 p.m. barbecue at 4 p.m. Swiss Days will finish with an adult There will be films on Switzerland in the Town Hall starting at 4 p.m. and a dance in the Town Hall from 9:30 p.m. to midnight with Horst Fidel providing parade through town at 6 p.m. 7 festivities start at a.m. the music. Saturday's Grove Now Class Action Case the - Third District company was closed Fishier has turned state. Court and the SALT LAKE CITY Judge Phillip a lawsuit over the bankruptcy of Grove Finance into a class action case, so all of the company's depositors who blame losses on the Utah Financial Institutions Department can sue as a group. Grove, a Pleasant Grove company, went bankrupt in 1980 after of Financial Institutions Mervin Borthick ordered the firm to stop accepting deposits. In April 1981, four Grove principals were indicted for defrauding investors , by A group of Grove depositors filed suit last year, claiming the department is liable for their financial loss. The judge's ruling permits 1,800 people who had money on deposit in Grove when it went bankrupt to ask for reimbursement from the department without filing a separate suit. Fishier said he would rule later on whether Utah's Government Immunity Act applies to the Grove case. If it does, total damages would be limited to $300,000. Obituaries He married Helen Duke in Reno, Nev. on Sept. 2, 1950. The marriage was solemnized in the St. George LDS Temple on Feb. , 1970. He was a veteran of World War II and a restaurateur in American Fork. He was a former Salt Lake County and American Fork City employee. He was an avid fisherman and a member of the LDS Church. Survivors include his wife of Lindon, two sons, Dr. Phillip L. Allred, Houston; Leland Kay Allred, Lindon; 10 grandchildren; and one one sister, Mrs. Maria Rocha. Azores Islands. One son, Everett Ray Allred, preceded him in death. Phillips Rosette Hodges Coe Phillips, 48, of Las Vegas, Nev., died in Provo on Monday, Aug. 30, 1982, after heart problems. She was born Feb. 6. 1934 in Las Vegas to Phillip and Christine Hodges. She was educated in Las Vegas and attended the University of Nevada. She married Nathan Bert Coe on Sept. 10. 1952. He died in July of 1968. She married Michael Malone. They later were divorced. She married Patrick Phillips on Sept. 15. 1979. Survivors include her husband JOSEPH VAS DENIZ of Las Vegas; four sons and one daughter, Bert D. Coe, HenderNev.; Kevin P. Coe and Funeral will be Friday, 11 son. Marlin J. Coe, both of Las Sons and Anderson at a.m., Vegas: Nathan L. Coe and Rose Mortuary, American Fork, Marie Coe. both of California; where friends may call today, 7 six grandchildren: two brothto 9 p.m. and Friday one hour ers. Ronnie Hodges and Nason prior to service. Burial will be Hodges, both of Kingman, Ariz. in the Provo City Cemetery. Funeral was today in the Las Vegas 36th Ward Chapel in Las Vegas. Burial will in at Palm Memorial Park in Henderson, IJSLl Nev. National Obituaries Helen Hall (UPI) social reformer Hall, NEW YORK Helen who a guided the Henry Street Settlement for 34 years and helped President Franklin Roosevelt draft the Social Security Act, died Tuesday at her home. She was 90. Miss Hall was executive director of the settlement house from 1933 to 1967. and at the same time served as an adviser on social reform to government leaders. Roosevelt appointed her in 1934 to his advisory committee on economic security, which drew up the Social Security Act. Miss Hall also advised New York Mayors Fiorello H. La Guardia and Robert F. Wagner on housing reform programs. During her tenure at the settlement house on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Miss Kail established programs for the elderly, the first mental hv- - Bertf r Mortuary 3 373-184- 1 J LaMar F. Checketts Funeral services will be held Friday 2 p.m. at the Berg Motuary of Provo. Friends may call at the mortuary thursday 6-- 8 p.m. and Friday prior to services. Interment Provo City Cemetery. giene clinic and the first family day camp. Miss Hall's husband, Paul Kellogg, editor of a sociological journal, the Survey, died in 1958. She has no survivors. Shelton NEW YORK (UPI) Robert E. Shelton. a public relations executive who served in three city administrations before joining Consolidated Edison, died Wednesday after a brief illness. He was 42. Shelton served as assistant press secretary to Mayors John Lindsay and Abraham Beame. and transfered at the beginning of Mayor Edward Koch s administration to the Mayor's Office of Special Events as public affairs director He was highly respected and well-likeby members of the press and municipal colleagues. In August 1980 he joined Consolidated Edison as manager ol the utility's feature news Robert F. Ray - A IOWA CITY, Iowa lUPIi funeral was pending for Robert F. Ray, University of Iowa dean and former president of the NCAA, who died Wednesday after a short illness. He was 60. University o( Iowa President James O. Freedman said he was "shocked and saddened" to learn of Ray's death. "His loss to the university, to this community and to the state is immeasurable. His idealism has been felt throughout the many educational organizations to which he gave devoted leadership for many decades." Ray was a member of the NCAA Laurance T. Wren FLAGSTAFF. Ariz iLPIl -Laurance T. Wren, the judge who presided over the trial that resulted in the landmark Miranda decision requiring law officers to inform suspects of their constitutional rights died Tuesday at Flagstaff Hospital and Medical Center. He was 56. Ellen Pitman Harris Funeral services were held today at the Berg Mortuary of Provo. Interment Spanish Fork City Cemetery. Verl Reed Brown He was the presiding judge in the Maricopa County Superior Court trial of Ernesto Miranda, whose rape conviction led to a landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June 1966, which Wren vigorously opposed. Wren became known as "the traveling judge'' in 1961. He temporarily served on the Appeals Court and the Arizona Supreme Court, and presided over trials in most Arizona counties. Robert Funeral services were Carol Harris Blounuield held today at the Berg Funeral services were from executive committee and served as president from 1965-7- association 1963 65. Clifford Curzon - UPI i Sir Clifford Curzon. considered by music critics to be perhaps Britain s only world-clas- s pianist, died LONDON Wednesday illness, his He was 75. i after a prolonged family said today During his career, he performed as a soloist with the great orchestras of Britain, Europe and the United States. SUnde Senate Race Hatch Supports Balanced Budget By ROD COLLETT Herald Staff Writer Utah Republican Senator Orrin Hatch says in order for the nation's economy to recover from the recession, President Reagan's legislative proposals must be approved without the usual "bipartisan overtones." Speaking to a group of more than 125 people Wednesday afternoon at the Orem City Center, senator said Reathe first-tergan continually has beat his foes in Congress and passed difficult, but needed proposals to revitalize the country. During the question and answer session, Hatch fielded a barrage of questions ranging from balancing the budget to the rising crime rate in Utah from an audience mostly of senior citizens. "What Congress has been doing for the past 50 years is borrowing against the good credit of this country to the extent that we have a total national debt of $1.3 trillion. Congress also has used inflation to bring in revenues to finance some of the high spending pro- grams." Rosette Joseph Vas Deniz Joseph Vas Deniz Jr., 77, of Undon, died Wednesday, Sept. 1, 1982 at Utah Valley Hospital. He was born Dec. 24, 1904 in Lowell, Mass. to Joseph Vas and Verna Denna Hallema Deniz. M News about your friends, neighbors and leaders in Central Utah The Utah Republican defined how the government benefits from inflation. "Every time inflation goes up one percent, federal government revenues go up 1.65 percent. The reason the federal government likes the system is that American workers are constantly being pushed into higher tax brackets. This simply means that we are being assessed auto matic tax increases so the government gets more revenues." Hatch is seeking running against Salt Lake City Mayor Ted Wilson. Hatch said those who oppose any effort to balance the budget must be singled out as big spenders. "Eighty percent of the people in this country want a balanced budget, and 74 percent favor the amendment that I am sponsoring that would bring expenditures in line with revenues." One man in the audience told Hatch that he favors a freeze on Social Security payments, wage increases for federal employees, others in the government and the private sector who benefit from taxpayer dollars. "I know of many elderly people in this country and in Utah who wcui J be willing to bite the bullet, to pay the price and make this country strong." Hatch specifically said that President Reagan will not cut or eliminate Social Security benefits, contrary to reports and speeches by other Congressional leaders including Rep. Claude Pepper, whom the Senator said constantly "harps" on the issue. Many of those in the audience questioned Hatch on what Reagan has done to curtail the growth of the bureaucracy. senator said The first-tersince President Reagan took of- fice in 1981, 23,000 V ( n't o u r, lis n ,? -- .&-' m r '. 4 o 1$' J Dennis Patterson Photo Hatch responds to questions. repeated criticism. Commenting on a rapid increase in the crime rate in cities and states, Hatch said he would favor the establishment of the death penalty as a regular means to deter violent criminals on the streets. He said the only way to keep the average citizen safe is to pass a stricter Freedom of Information Act to protect informants who cooperate with the police and to push state legislatures to enact tougher penalties for people convicted of crimes. Nations. Hatch replied by saying that even though third world countries often use the U.N. as a forum to blast American foreign policy, the world body is still a healthy way for nations to discuss tense international events and to have a forum for some kind of understanding between developing and industrialized nations. He also praised U.N. Ambassador Jean Kirkpatrick as a woman of great influence and integrity and willing to stand up for America in the midst of People Count, Beckham Asserts kmJ-By DAWN TRACY Herald Staff Writer. Saying he has had to resole his shoes more than once, Third Congressional District candidate Ray Beckham ended a walking tour on the steps of the state capital in Salt Lake City today. The walking tour began Aug. 19 in Salt Lake City and covered Manila and Vernal in the north and Mexican Hat and Moab to the south. "It's been the greatest experience of my life," said Beckham. "I've met ranchers, farmers, housewives, mayors, county commissions and I've listened to all of them voice concerns about our nation." Beckham said the tour has convinced him that people support President Ronald Reagan and they have "great patience. They're willing to give Reagan the time he needs to turn the economy around." Beckham adds that Reagan needs one full term to do the job. "People have shown me that my support of the president has been well placed," he said. "I will continue to endorse the president's programs." 62-ci- Beckham announced this morning that a conservative political action committee, The Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress, has endorsed his candidacy for the newly created Third Congressional District. Other conservative groups such as the National Conservative Political Action Committee and Ruff PAC already have endorsed him. "I discovered on my tour that many people didn't know they are in the Third Congressional District or who the candidates are," said Beckham. "But most everyone expresed a great interest, concern and love for their country." The newly created district includes Utah, Summit, Daggett, Unitah, Duchesne, Wasatch, Carbon, Sanpete, Sevier, Emery, Grand and San Juan counities and the southwest corner of Salt Lake County. .residents favor test drilling to see if nuclear waste can be stored in the area. He said he will support area residents in their desire to have nuclear waste stored there. "Local people should have a say in what goes on in their area," he said. "The people in Moab aren't afraid of nuclear waste. They've been around nuclear materials all their livos and they know it's safe if certain precautions are observed. They don't have the fear others do." In the Unitah Basin, Beckham said residents are concerned about protecting their water resources and developing oil shale. He said two pilot oil shale projects could be producing oil by next year. He added that people in the basin are divided on whether the federal government should become involved in oil shale development. Beckham believes private industry can develop oil shale without the help of the federal government. photographs of the present Provo Tabernacle or its predecessor, the Provo Meeting House, also remembered as the "Old Tabernacle?" A manuscript history of the two tabernacles will be published and interesting photos especially interior or "during construction" views are sought for use, says Ephraim Hatch, who is preparing illustrations for the edition. early-da- y Entitled, "Provo's Two Tabernacles and the People Who Built Them," the history was researched and written by N. LaVerl Christensen, editor emeritus of The Daily Herald. 373-244- , Moab and the Unitah Basin. In Moab, he explained, most Photos Sought Of 'Old Tabernacle' Do you have any f - Beckham said people expressed regional concerns in Phone Mortuary of Provo. Inte- held today at the n Sunberg-Olpirment Provo City Mortuary A "limited publication" is planned by the Provo of Orem. Interment Gregg Hunter Cemetery. Memorial services will East Stake of which Richard H. Cracroft Orem City Cemetery. is be held Thursday at 2 president and Hatch is clerk. Jerry S. Harrli p.m. at the Salem Stake The publication is timed in connection with the Funeral services were Lucille Middlen held today at the Funeral Mass was held Center, 470 E. Salem 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Provo American Fork 20th today at the St. Francis Canal Road. Private Tabernacle construction. Ward Chapel. Interment Church. Interment Orem graveside services will Copies must be reserved in advance, says be held. City Cemetery. Hatch, who can be reached at Provi Citv Cemetery. 798-676- 3 January, pages of regulations have been cut from the federal register. Another elderly man asked Hatch if it is wise for the United States to remain in the United J m " ' 3 373-700- 1 Beckham said Congress should consider a gradual extension of the retirement age from 65 to 68 and drop benefits to college students. "Many retirees work only a few years and receive full Social Security benefits," he said. "Such benefits should be more closely tied with the length of time the retiree contributes to the system." AFFORDABLE ZTJ TZ PRICES I PORCELAIN :V.n,m., CDCCi HCKITAI jksC? i. i ml. i i ulii - . K Provo I1TW Hill llr'tllll Steve Heiner Photo retirement years. Porcelain or Gold Crowni & Bridget Filling, Extractions and Root Canali i 201 W. 1st AT : c, & GREENHOUSE eWIRE IW through the age of 50 can build individual trust funds for their Beckham, looking tired after the tour, said the trip has been exhausting but also exciting. In discussing Social Security, he said America must keep its promises to its senior citizens, but Congress should stop playing political football with the system by voting for increased benefits which continue to throw the program out of balance. Beckham said he favors the transfer of Social Security funds to private trust funds for those now coming Into the work force. He added that those people PROVO FLORAL What You'd Like To Say I fcan Beckham says walking tour great experience. (55Vj.T&y i Our flowers Say I MMMHMMHlk Vs Vi T .iiJ Whit CROWNS 1 QQ mi ni rurni n v . r-- 1 FREE DENTURE EXAM -- - -- r. DENTURE TECHNICIAN FOR STAFF QUICK SERVICE: ON FULL-TIM- E RELINES you wait, by appointment: REPAIRS - - 40plat GOLDEN DENTAL CENTER v No appointment notdtd 1 hour Mrvito. I. KENT ELKIIIGTOII, D.D.S. 275 Borlh 500 Wttl PKOVO 374-57- 6$ |