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Show Page 4 - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah. Sunday. December 11. 1983 Drunk, Drugged Driving Awareness Week xa Tradition' Christmas a Time for Lessons By VERLAINE ALLEN Tyler Hansen was elected chairman of the board this year. Store managers were Ryan Devereaux, Chad Parrish American Fork Correspondent AMERICAN FORK Fifth grade students form a corporation, sell stock, join the American Fork Chamber of Commerce, hire and train workers, produce and purchase an inventory, price and sell goods at Barratt Elementary School in American Fork, where the Christmas Store is an annual event. For seven years the store has been created each December under the direction of Bill Doxey, Marva Peterson and Jerry Jacobs, fifth grade teachers. Principal Douglas - and Dawna Hampton. Advertising is important to any business, so Todd Allen and Michelle Nielson were as- The second annual National signed that, seeing posters were put up, announcements made over the school intercom, etc. Producers were Shon Reed, David Williamson and Rebecca IP L Drunk and Drugged ' Congressman Jim Hansen, Hansen, who is a member of President Reagan's Drunk Driving Commission, said the awareness week is a major factor in preventing thousands of deaths and injuries on the nation's highways. He urged all Americans to observe the week by working with local police, state governments and private organizations to promote awareness. The private organizations include Students Against Drunk Drivers (SADD), Parents Against Drunk Drivers (PADD), and Remove Intoxicated Drivers (RID). The Utah Chiefs of Police, in cooperation with the Utah Highway Safety Division, will be emphasizing the week with TV and radio spots and press releases focusing on the dangers of drink- Timothy. Five shares per person were sold at 10 cents a share. Students showed samples of products they intended to sell and decided upon a fair price, with some going to the student, some to the corporation and some to the school. The producer told what he considered a fair price to cover costs and labor and a fair profit, and the item was marked up from that. Parents assisted the students with some of the projects, and some students did all the creation and production them- Nicholes is enthusiastic about the store because it teaches the students so many skills. It introduces them to the concept of capitalism, and at the same time it makes a profit for shareholders and the school. Corporate profits are distributed after the store closes and stockholders vote on what to purchase with the school's share of the money. Last year $1,400 in profits went to the stockholders and $250 to the school fcr rental, etc. In previous years the profits have purchased landscaping, toys for the school yard and computers. Driving Awareness week, scheduled Dec. 11 to 17, is fast becoming a national tradition, according to ' selves. Every other aspect, bookkeeping, marketing, etc. was done by the students. Some parents, as evidence by the crowded store, did become some of the store's best ing and driving. In addition, the Utah Division of Alcoholism and Drugs, which was allotted $2 million by the Utah Legislature for drug and alcohol Jerry Jacobs, a teacher at Barratt Elementary in American Fork, helps students with their annual Christmas Store project. education and prevention, is conthoutinuing its efforts by issuing sands of educational pamphlets and by other promotions. Hansen said the awareness week has truly been an effective tool in reducing drunk and drugged driving fatalities during the holiday season. "Last year's awareness week enorduring December was an 'We declared. he mous success," L tradition the continue to hope ensure that the momentum and attention do not slip away as society turns its interest to other problems." National Safety Council statis- tics showed the number of traffic New deaths over the three-da- y Years holiday last year was the lowest since 1949, with 282 deaths, as compared with 338 deaths for the same period in 1981. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that about 55 percent of the estimated violent deaths occurring from motor vehicle crashes each leyear involve drivers who are to gally drunk. This figure rises in 65 single than percent more vehicle crashes. 44,000 Obituaries Raymond Knight Raymond "Jesse" Knight, 62, died Dec. 9, 1983 ;a ipringville. He was born Jan. 20, 1921 in Raymond. Alberta, Canada to I Raymond Knight Jr. and Leona Christen- sen Knight. He married Norma Spackman in Janu ft 'i it 1946 ary, - in Leth- - K J i bridge, Alberta, Can ada. They were later divorced. He was the oldest of great-grandso- n n Jesse Knight, a Utah industriRaymond Knight alist and humanitar ian. He received his education in Raymond, Alberta, a town named after his grandfather Oscar Raymond Knight. During high school he worked as a rancher and farmhand for his grandfather and attended a lew semesters at Brigham Young University. Books and reading were his greatest loves and he was also an exceptional hocVey player. He joined the U.S. Army Air Force in February 1943 and served as a bomb armer in the Asiatic Pacific campaign including the Marshall Islands and Kauii, Hawaii. He was awarded the Bronze Star. He was a hardrock and uranium miner in Pioche, Nev.; Butte, Mont.; Lark and Moab. He lived in Moab for five years before becoming ill. He later moved to Springville where he has lived for the past 15 years. He is survived by two sons and one daughter: Kenneth Keith Knight, Los Angeles, Calif.; Cary Raymond Knight, Moab; Mrs. John (Margaret Elaine) Watts. Ft. Bragg, North Carolina; two grandchildren: Joseph A. Watts, Douglas V. Watts, both of Ft. Bragg, N.C.; mother and Mr. and Mrs. Einer and Leona Ostlund, Winnie Knight, Salt Provo; Lake City; one sister: Mrs. William (Carol Jean) Hope; Victoria, British Columbia; four Lily Adair, Dorothy Taylor, both of Salt Lake City; Helen Reed, Grants. N. M.; Linda Tracy, Wendall, Robert Dean Ost-lanIdaho; two Orem; and Bert L. Ostland, Provo. Graveside services will be Monday at 2 p.m. at the Provo City Cemetery. Friends may call at Berg Mortuary of Provo, 185 East Center St., Monday from 12:45 to 1:45 p.m. Full military rites will be accorded at the graveside by the VFW District 4. Maggie Holm Maggie Alvira Rigby Gardner Holm, 86, died Friday, Dec. 9, 1983 in the Mountain View Hospital in Payson. She was bom Sept. 27, 1897 in Fairview, a daughter of James L. and Alvira Ann Spen cer Kigby. She married Earl Gardner Nov. 29, 1916 in Salt Lake City. Their marriage was later solomin-ize- d in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints" Manti Temple in June 1956. He died May 9, 1963. She married d Holm Aug. 26, i 3 11 A.R.G. Holm received her Mifgie educaiton in the Fairview schools and after her marriage, they made their home in Birdseye until 1945 when they moved to Spanish Fork. She was employed for the Nebo School District in the school lunch program for a number of years. She was an active member of the LDS Church and was active in the Relief Society. While in Birdseye, she served in the Relief Society Presidency. Surviving are her husband of Spanish Fork, two sons .and four daughters: Von Gardner, Grand Junction,' Colo. ; Dean Gardner, Enterprise; Mrs. Grant (Anna) Seely, Mt. Pleasant; Mrs. Julian (Odetta) West, Murray; Mrs. Madge Haymond, Springville; Mrs. Frank (Virginia) Johnson, Spanish Fork; one stepson and one stepdaughter: Martha Hanson, Spaniah Fork; Max Holm, Murray; 31 grandchildren, 74 and five one brother and one sister: Don Rigby, Springville;. and Ruby Rose, Fallon, Nev. Services are Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the Spanish Fork Ninth LDS Ward Chapel, First South and Main. Friends may call at the I Walker IS h, KS F. M O K 0O S T L PROVO A R Y 7t.Ail Stiffer Penalties Walker Mortuary Monday from 8 p.m. and Tuesday at the mortuary one hour prior to services. Burial will be in Salem City Cemetery. his new family. In 1916 they home-steade-d a farm in the Sterling, Idaho area. Later, he worked for many years on the Oleson Family Farm in Wapello, Idaho and also did some construction work. He never married. He is survived by a brother, Harold Sackett, Plancetia, Calif.; and two sisters: Mrs. William (Genevieve) Klockenteter, Vancouver, Wash.; and Mrs. Robert (Myrtle) Kickok, Paw Paw, Mich. He was preceded in death by a twin brother Francis Sackett, and a sister, Fleeta Marie Smith. Services are Monday at 1 p.m. at the Funeral Chapel in Black-foo- t, Idaho. Burial is in the Grove City Cemetery at Blackfoot. and Harriet Thomsen - SODA SPRINGS, Idaho Harriet Amlia Skinner Thomsen, 88, of Soda Springs died 1983 at the home of a Thursday, Dec. 9, daughter. She was born Dec. 15, 1894 at Nounan, Idaho, a daughter of Hyrum and Elizabeth Ann Hunter Skinner. She married Peter Thomsen on Nov. 5, 1913 at Paris, Idaho. The marriage was later solemnized in the Logan Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. He died in 1954. She lived in Nounan until she was 18, then moved to Denver and Greeley, Colo. She homesteaded with her husband at Eight Mile, Idaho in 1920. She has lived in Soda Springs since 1937. She was a member of the LDS Church. Survivors include three sons and three daughters; Peter A. Thomsen of Paul, Idaho; Taft Thomsen of Soda Springs, Idaho; Macks Thomsen of Saratoga, Wyo.; Mrs. Stewart (Ingeburg) West and Mrs. David (Mary Jane) Jenkins, both of Orem; Mrs. Dean (Millie) Humphreys of Soda Springs, Idaho; 28 grandchildren, 56 greatgrandchildren; and one sister, Mrs. Eram-trud- e Anderson Maughan of Carlsbad, Calif. She was preceded in death by two sons, two daughters, a grandson, two brothers and six sisters. Services will be Monday at 1 p.m. in the Soda Springs LDS stake center. Friends may call at the Allen Funeral Home in Soda Springs Sunday from 7 to 8 p.m. and on Monday from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Burial will be in the Fairview Cemetery. Myrtle Clark Myrtle Annie Dalrymple Clark, 91, died in Evergreen Nursing Home in Provo, Thursday, Dec. 8, 1983. She was born Jan. 19, 1892, in St. Charles, Idaho, the daughter ?? '! e v. iiai iiwii j Laker Her Dalrymple. early years were! in the Bear 1 spent j and Elnora j i Lake Valley of Idaho. She married Wil liam O. Clark June I I 24, 1914, in The of Jesus Church Christ of Latter Day Saints' I Salt Lake, Temple. They moved to Provo in 1935. She was a member of the A.D. Clark LDS Church and Myrtle served in the presidencies of the Primary and the Mutual Improvement Association. She also served in the Junior Sunday School as its coordinator, and as a councilor. She Lavon Finch Peterson, 82, of Woodland, was a chorister and a visiting teacher in the Calif., a former resident of Goshen, died Relief Society. Thursday, Dec. 8, 1983. She has been a temple worker in the She was born Dec. Provo for the past several years. I She wasTemple 21, 1900 in Goshen, a MF a member of the Daughters of the daughter of Ephraim Utah Pioneers, the Alice Louise Reynolds and Mary Davis Literary Club and the Browning Society. Finch. She married She is survived by her husband and three Lemar Petersen in daughters: Mrs. Melba (Chester) May, DenGoshen in 1919. They ver, Colo.; Mrs. Marrial (William) moved to California I Salt Lake City; and Mrs. Doris in 1948. He died in: (Joseph) Cranmer, Pueblo, Colo.; one 1955. I brother i , Russell N. Dalrymple, San Diego, She was a member Calif.; four sisters, Ivy Hoff and Ruth of The Church of i Collipriest, Salt Lake City; DeEtte Wray, Jesus Christ of LatterAshland, Ore.; and Lois Lucien, Big Bear, -day Saints. 10 Calif.; grandchildren and 15 She is survived by She was preceded in death by a two sons and one L,von finch Peterson ion, a grandson, five brothers and three daughter, Darrell L. listers. Peterson of Orem, Leslie Reed Peterson of Services will be Monday at 10 a.m. in the Sacramento, Calif, and Mrs. James (Shirley Walker Mortuary Chapel in Provo, 85 E. 300 one Joyce) Brown, Woodland, Calif.; S. Friends may call at the mortuary Sunday brother and one sister, Vern Finch of Yolo, evening from 8 p.m. and Monday one hour Calif, and Mrs. Charles (Shirley) Persson of to the services. prior Woodland, Calif.; 10 grandchildren and 18 Burial will be in the Montpelier, Idaho, cemetery. Graveside services will be Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. at the Goshen City Cemetery. Friends may call at Holladay Hills Funeral Home in Santaquin from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. Burial will be in the Goshen City Cemetery. ti&?k Lavon F. Peterson It W it J Flora Gourdin Bjarnson, 88, of Springville, died Friday. Dec. 9, 1983 at the Mountain View Hospital in Payson. She was born Sept. 25, 1895 in Scofield, the daughter of Leon and Mary Evans Gourdin. She married Ray I. Bjarnson in Provo on Jan. 2, 1914. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. He died in October of this year. She came to Utah County at the age of five and had lived here since. Flora She was a member Bjarnson of the LDS Church and had served in the Relief Society as a visiting teacher for more than 40 years. Survivors include four sons and two daughters, Ray Hosmer Bjarnson of Orem; Glen Bjarnson of Salt Lake City; Lynn Bjarnson of Mapleton; Mrs. Ned (Rosalie) Morgan of Provo; Mrs. Ted (Joyce) Simson and Leon Bjarnson, both of Springville; four sisters and one brother, Tim Marsh of Murray; Mrs. Jennie Jensen of Orem; Mrs. Tressa Parker of Ogden; Mrs. Sadie Hanson of Spanish Fork and Mrs. Rachel Beck of Springville; 25 grandchildren and 64 greatgrandchildren. Services will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the LDS Ward chapel at Springville First-12t- h 820 S. 400' E. Friends may call at the Wheeler Mortuary, 211 E. 200 S. in Springville Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. or at the church Tuesday one hour prior to services. Burial will be in the Springville Evergreen Cemetery. Nat'l Obituaries - Character MODESTO, Calif. (UPI) actor Slim Pickens, who went from riding in rodeos to riding the bomb in "Dr. Strange-love,- " died Thursday following a long bout with pneumonia, a family friend said. He was 64. c ui luge, 1V11IUI. He had worked as I maintenance supervisor for the MinneaDO- lis School Board for ' Our Frank Baum Sackett, SHELLEY, Idaho 80, a long-tim- e Bingham County, Idaho, resident, died Thursday, Dec. S, 1983 at the Campbell Shelter Home in Shelley where be had been a resident for the past seven years. He was born Jan. 28, 1903 in Provo, the son of Robert Franklin and Mary Jane Baum Sackett. His mother died five days after his birth. He then lived with his Grandmother Baum in Provo unUl the age of seven. In 1915 he moved to Idaho with his father Berg Mortuary flown Say What You'd like To Say f GIVE A LIVING GIFT Flowers & Plants For Every Occasion CARDENCENTEH 435 South fcrarflyPfi Remember with Flowers Tjelping you say il right To send a beautifully designed arrangement, call or visit . . . fjeppson's t?i r torai ol a C&omt i o mtm. 20S jv West Provo and Olft uiii 400 North Ov 373-449- STri 8 University Mall aP 1 Memorial Stones fcttiw biter not if you have a V 1,1 rm J i hearing problem Christmas just isn't Christmas if you can't hear all the wonderful sounds of the season! Our electronic hearing test is free -- and you can have it in your own home if you would WIRE SERVICE Tht mIi price. Granite stone is smoothed on the edges by Wayne Beesley as part of the preparation to make the memorial as attractive as possible. Beesleys takes pride in personaliz- ing memorials for all their customers. 93 Ytars of Exptrienci Helps Us Answer Your Qutstions DEESLEY MONUMENT AND VAULT CO. 725 South State 900 East, Provo Across the street east of Prove Cemetery N Phone 374-05- 80 UcemWky theStateefUUh. tfhtriiif' Idtm fealtr is ttu mi. HEARING 201 H. 1st S., Provo 1 231 HEARING AMfN A AID Will HHP AID J SERVICE Center, Prow, 37M1W W. FAMILY DENTISTRY AT AFFORDABLE PRICES! Cleaning Norma Jene Wood Harding Funeral services will be held Monday 11 a.m. at the Berg Mortuary of Provo. Friends may call at the mortuary Sunday 8 p.m. and Monday 1 hour prior to services. Interment Orem City Cemetery. yj 7 6-- Andrew Adams Funeral services were held Satur' Myrtle Annie Clark - Funeral services will be held Mou-- : day at the Berg Mortuary of Provo. Interment Provo City Cemetery. day 10 a.m. at the Walker Mortuary Friends ; Chapel. may call at the - Walker Mortuary of Provo Sunday 6--i Raymond Jesie Knight Mon8 p.m. and Monday 1 hour prior to Funeral services will be held 2 1983 Under Dec. at 12, p.m. Interment Montpelier, day, ; services. the direction of Berg Mortuary. out of a survey of 1,100 conducted by the Kemper a leading auto insurer, broad range of groups active in the drunk driving Terry iWjSPr 1 Ricky Jack Thornton Funeral services were held Saturday at Berg Mortuary of Provo. Interment Provo City Cemetery. These are recommendations coming persons Group, from a many years and later for the Yuma, Ariz., School Board in the same position. Survivors include his wife of Orem; a son and two daughGeorge Otto ters: Mrs. Irene Jen sen of Pleasant Grove; Robert George Otto and Mrs. Harold (Delia May) Lee, both of Minneapolis; 12 grandchildren; 22 greatgrandchildren; two sisters: Mrs. Swen (Nellie) Torgerson of East Chicago, Ind.; Mrs. Milton (Viola) Stegerof Minneapolis, Minn. Services will be Wednesday at Forrest Lake, Minn. Friends may call at the Olpin Family Mortuary, 500 S. 300 E Pleasant Grove, Sunday, 9 p.m. Christmas?' like. Special Christmas 373-700- If leaders in the fight against drunk driving had their way, there would be mandatory jail sentences for those convicted of driving under the influence, and the national drinking age would be 21. 225-112- & GREENHOUSE Frank B. Sackett yLf Where ffuiineai it Blooming PROVO FLORAL Thomas George Ishmael Otto, 80, of Orem, died at his home Friday, Dec. 9, 1983. He was born May 27, 1903, in McLoed, S.D., to John H. and Eva Myrtle Kannady Otto. 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