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Show - Friday October 30. IW8, THE DAILY HERALD, Pruo, I'tah GLENN A7 OBITUARIES Continued from Al exploded in 1986. 1 hope he doesn't blow up," said Brent Sevey, a fourth-grad- e student "Hien, I will be mad." As the waited for the launch, he repeatedly told his friend his worries. TTOien, he wouldn't go up, and he's been just dying to go up," Sevey said. "If it blows up, Tm going to be crying. If it does blow, I hope he gets out quick enough." As the shuttle rockets jettisoned and the shuttle rotated so the seven-membcrew rode upside down, Sevey spoke his relief: Tm happy now." At recess, Hoyt Freeman, a second-grad- e student, said he wants to go into space but the possibility of an explosion would keep him on the ground. GARDNER Continued from A 1 him during their meeting June 8, and he called the ones who weren't at the meeting and got their OK as well. However, association chair- man and Santaquin Mayor Keith Broadhead contend Gardner never had the endorsement of the mayors as a group. There was no resolution and no letter of support," he said. Broadhead said minutes from the June 8 meeting do not show a motion regarding endorsing Gardner, who is runto Utah ning for County Commission Seat B. Santaquin recorder Susan Farnsworth took the minutes that night. Broadhead wrote a letter to Gardner Thursday stating the association does not endorse him. "We strongly feel that your various public political advertisements that claim support from this group are dishonest and a ROLLOVER Continued from Al both treated and released from Utah Valley Regional Medical Center. ; Capua said her vehicle and the truck were traveling southbound and had just crossed over the 800 North overpass when the crash occurred. ; Capua said she was planning to exit the freeway at Center street in Provo and it appeared the truck near her changed lanes and then lost control. She said the truck hit her car, causing it to spin around. The truck then went down the interstate embankment, leaving her car upright on the highway. ' After rolling down the BATS Continued from A I sonar powers for discriminating and properly dietary dining. "It (bat) can distinguish between prey it wants to eat versus insects that are or not as nutritious," Rogers said. Your average fighter pilot wishes he had it so good. "It's a much more complex system than anything we've been able to devise electronically," Rogers said. Brent Coleman, a BYU graduate student, who shares Rogers' passion and extensive studies of bats, said they are have unerringhunting techniques. These animals have developed the ability to forage around sometimes mileach other lions of them navigating in the and have figured same area out how to deal with interference from other bats," Coleman said. ' The government spends a whole lot of money building jet fighters that can't do that yet. These tiny bats have more complicated radar and echolocation than anybody's been able to F-1- 6 tjreamup." Bats are plentiful and impactful on the ecosystem. ; With more than 1,000 species Worldwide, they comprise the second largest group of mam'. mals, second only to rodents. Oh, another misperception. sine Weeks Andersen Bonebrake Cf' life JASON OLSON The OaiK Hnald Next generation: Students at Central Elementary School in Pleasant Grove watch a television screen as Discovery lifts off Thursday. Linda de Jel , a third-grad- e student, said she had no qualms about riding in a rocket. Caden Walker, a second-grad- e direct attempt to mislead the voting public," Broadhead wrote. Gardner 6aid he is frustrated since the same ad ran in June for the primary election but the mayors didn't say anything about it back then. "No one said it was out of line. No one said a word," Gardner said. County Commissioner Jerry Grover said he was at the meeting on June 8. "As far as I know, they had a general agreement to endorse him (Gardner)," Grover said. Grover doesn't However, remember a specific motion or any hands raised. But he said he doesn't recall any objections to endorsing Gardner either. Gardner said, that by writing a letter saying the mayors don't endorse him, Broadhead is speaking on behalf of the 10 mayors without their permission. Few of the 10 mayors were for available comment Thursday. Woodland Hills Mayor Nile Jensen said he didn't remem embankment the truck came to rest upside-dowpartially in the backyard of a house on Geneva Road. The truck's cab was smashed, and four people were trapped inside, said Lynn Schofield, a Provo City Fire Department Paramedic. n Firefighters from two fire stations used equipment to free the injured occupants, but it took nearly an hour to get the last victim out, Schofield said. Using powerful cutting equipment and devices that force sheet metal apart, firefighters freed the first two victims relatively quickly from the passenger side of the truck. Schofield said one of the two men was believed to be in fairly good condition and the other was critical but conscious. Not rodents "Bats have been termed 'flying rodents' in the press, which they're not," Rogers said. Because they consume such enormous quantities of insects, "they play a role in ecology or general dynamics of a natural system," Rogers said. "It's clear we don't completely understand or appreciate that role." Another bad rap bats get is the rabies bit. Contrary to popular thinking, bats have low rabies rates. "Yes, they transmit rabies," Rogers said. "But so does any other mammal. If you find a bat that's hurt or is on the sidewalk and is sick, then the chance that it is rabid is greatly increased. "It's not that bats are rabies specialists. It's just that when people encounter them in unusual places, the bats are often sick." 19 species in Utah There are 19 bat species in Utah, Coleman said. There are many gaps in the knowledge even researches collect about existing populations. Much research is done in the dead of night, using laptop computers programmed to record the blips, clicks and chirps of bats. There's a lot of waiting around. You have to be patient to study bats," Coleman said, who puts in about 40 hours a month on a riverside graveyard shift recording bat calls. student, said he was impressed with the shuttle design, "It was really cool," said the 7- year-ol- d Walker. ber endorsing Gardner at a meeting but would endorse him now if he was asked. "I think he's been doing an job," Jensen said, Mapleton Mayor Richard Young said he doesn't remember endorsing Gardner. Young left the meeting early that night. "I don't like someone saying I've endorsed them when I was never asked," he said. Young said he isn't sure if he would endorse Gardner now but would want to talk with him first and do some research before making a decision. all-rig- Mayor Neil Brown declined to comment on whether he was at the meeting Genola or remembered endorsing Gardner but said he would endorse him now. The other six mayors didn't return phone calls Thursday. Elaine Weeks Anderson Bonebrake. 68. of Orem, passed away Wednesday On. 28, 1998 with her family at her side. She was born Nov. 27. 1929 in Charleston, Utah to Robert and Nellie Harris Weeks. She married Loren Wells Anderson. They were later divorced. moved to Pleasant Grove Elaine enjoyed the outdoors and spent The remaining two occupants were trapped under the twisted remains of the truck's cab and chassis. Firefighters worked mostly from the driver's side to free the second pair, but a paramedic began treating one victim from the passenger side. Schofield said rescuers were not able to detect vital signs from the man who died, while they had been able at times to talk to the other man. Schofield said firefighters finally used air lift bags and hydraulic rams to free the remaining two victims. "We used everything we had," Schofield said. He said rescuers were sometimes frustrated when their ram broke through rusted sections of the truck. "It cuts into your social life. It cuts into your sleep," Coleman said. But its rewarding if you're a bat man. "We can record the ultrasonic call, digitize and convert it into a sound we can hear, plus display it on a computer screen as a sonogram," Rogers said. What they have determined is that some bat species are struggling to survive. Especially creature a large, pink-lobecalled the Townsend's Bat. It flocks in Utah and Idaho, but now is dwindling. OK, now let's get down to the She married William Bonebrake, he passed away in 1996. She grew up in both Midway & Pleasant Grove and graduated from Pleasant Grove High School. Before moving to Pleasant Grove, she lived with her family on their dairy farm near the Deer Creek Park. When the dam was built, they U. love to share with Balkwill, Rose Marie Shephard, Jeneal Petersen, LuJean Hunt. Preceded in death by her parents and one brother. everyone. She is survived by her children, Ross (Lynette) Madsen of Delta, IT; Brenda (David) Funeral services will be held at 12 noon Monday Nov. 2, 1998 in the Nephi 1st Ward, 222 South 100 East. Friends may call Sunday evening from 6-- p.m. at the Anderson Funeral Home, 94 West 300 North and at the church one hour prior to services. Burial will Ih in the Vine Bluff Cemetery, Nephi, Utah. Additional services will be held at 1 1 a.m. Saturday Oct. 31, 1998 in the Thurber Ward, Bicknell, Utah. Friends may call at the church one hour prior to services. McPherson, Barbara (Roy! McPherson both of Nephi, UT; Teresa (Richard) Baiton of SLC, UT; Paula (Brock) Finch of Nephi, UT; Jade Madsen of SLC, UT; 16 grandchildren; one brother, DelRoy Moosman; four sisters, Velma He died Dec. 24, 1985. She was an active member of the LDS church. She loved cooking, sewing, gardening, and her animals. She loved to alwavs stav busv and had a lot of Richard Vera Shoell Richard Vern of Shoell, 85, Pleasant Grove, and worked for Union Pacific Railroad for over 35 years, retiring in 1978. He was a high in the priest Grove Pleasant Fifth Ward and will be remembered for 1 died Oct. 28, 1998. He was born in Pleasant Grove on Aug. 5, 1913 to Frederick Charles Margaret service to his fami ly and friends. He is survived by a sister, Pearl Shoell Cullimore of Garland, Utah; a nephew, Frederick R. "Bob" (Ruth) Shoell, Pleasant a (Shyrleen) Shoell, other nieces and Grove; grand-nephe- R. Michael Lindon; many and nephews and s grand-niece- nephews. He was preceded in death by a brother, Frederick Spiers Shoell; eight sisters: Dezzie Shoell, Thelma Shoell Watkins, Louise Shoell Tohler, Ethel Shoell Webb, Edna Shoell, Geneva Shoell Wanlass, Helen Shoell Webb, Dorothy Shoell Billeter. Funeral services will be held Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 at 11:00 a.m. in the Pleasant Grove Fifth Ward Chapel, 455 East 200 South, Pleasant Grove where friends may call from 9:30 to the time of services. Burial will be in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. The family would like to extend a special thanks to the staff at Alpine Valley Care Center for their service these manv vears. his compassionate Wilson Shoell. He was a lifelong resi dent of Pleasant Grove. He attended schools and graduated from Pleasant Grove High School. He served in the U.S. Army during WWII and was wounded in the Battle of the Bulge. He received the Purple Heart for his wounds and was honorably discharged in 1945. He Barry D. Campbell Barry DeLange Campbell, age 49, of Payson, passed away Wednesday, Oct. 28, 1998 at Utah Valley Regional Medical Center. He was born April 26, 1 919 in Provo, Utah, a son of Thomas Levell and Rodna Guerna Crawford Campbell. He married Shirley Jean Judson, April 23, 1969 in Ely, Nevada. Barry served in the U.S. Army. He worked for Superior Air Handling Co. He was a craftsman of his trade and was respected by all with whom he worked. Our beloved husband, father, grandfather, son, and brother. You were the most loving, generous, and kind person we ever knew. A giant of a man in body and soul. Your sense of humor and unjudging treatment of others will always be remembered. Cal (Maxine) Campbell, of Provo. He was preceded in death by his father, and a brother, Gordon R. "Pete" Survivors his wife, include: Campbell. Services will be Monday, Nov. 2, 1998, 11 a.m., in the Payson 18th LDS Ward Chapel, 650 West 800 South. Friends may call at the Walker Mortuary, 587 South 100 West, Payson, p.m., or at the church Sunday a.m. Burial will be Monday, 9:45-10:4- 5 in the Santaquin Cemetery with military rites accorded by the V.F.W., Dist. No. 4. Shirley, Payson; two sons and a daughter: Michael Campbell, Beach, Laguna California; Clint (April) A i 8 o n ) Campbell, and Marisa Campbell, all of five grandchildren: Eric, Payson; McCord, Chelsea, Tanner, Lea; his mother, Rodna Campbell, Santaquin; three brothers and three sisters: Levell ( 1 1 mm- (Wanda) Campbell, Denver, Colorado; Nancy Bassett, Emily Hewitt, Sue (Dan) Allred, all of Sandy, Utah; Dale (GenaVee) Campbell, Denver, Colorado; Provo husband, children and grandchildren, and returned to her heavenly home to embrace her parents, sibson lings, and Cameron in Neiafu, Vavau, Tonga. Maile is survived by her husband of Provo; five sons and one daughter: Matini (Momi) Heimuli of Orem; Feao (Loumaile) Heimuli of Kahuku, Hawaii; Siosifa (Susana) Heimuli of Salt Lake; Lakei (Pania) Heimuli of Heimuli of Bountiful; Charney Maile was born May 27, 1936 in Haapai, Tonga to Aisake and Maile Moelolo She married Pahulu. Penisimani Heimuli on Sept. 28, 1959 Orem Helen T. Stone, died Oct. 27, 1998. Funeral services will be held on Friday, Oct. 30, 1998 at 11 a.m. in the Spanish Fork Ninth Ward Chapel, 98 South Main. Friends and family may call Friday morning at the church one hour prior to the services. Oregon; Hema (Mari) Heimuli of Orem; 13 grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Monday, Nov. 2, 1998, at 11 a.m., in the Sunset 12th LDS Chapel, 1020 South 1090 West, Provo. Friends may call Sunday evening, from 6-p.m., at the ward chapel, or Monday, one hour prior to services. Interment, Provo City Cemetery. Portland, daughter Honekoula. Payson "Serving our Families and the Community" Maile Moelolo (Pohahau) Heimuli Maile Moelolo Pohahau Heimuli, age 62, of Provo, left her earthly home 1 surrounded by her I I - FAMILY MORTUARIES Spanish Fork DEATH NOTICE Stephen Harris Carman, 50, of Provo, died Oct. 28, 1998. Services are pending and will he announced by Walker Sanderson Funeral Home of Orem. HOME FURNISHINGS III" JQ( ADJUSTA MAGIC: I x SI SELECTION OF PREMIUM SPRING AIR MATTRESSES v" INSTANT CREDIT 800 S TO PRICES Iit m 1 CALL AT A FRACTION BEDS OF MS NOBODY BEATS R.C. YILLEY! 6 Convenient Stobe Locations To Serve Youl Compassionate neighbors They're also compassionate, if in a completely messy way. "If some members of the colony come back with a blood meal and others are unsuccessful, the ones that have fed will regurgitate the blood for those who haven't fed," Rogers said. OK. So that fits the screen image a bit. a.m. may call for a viewing from 10-1Burial will be in the Pleasant Grove Citv Cemetery. Timpview Second Ward. NEPHI Mary Elizabeth Moosman (Marabeth) Madsen, age 59, passed away Oct. 28, 1998 in Nephi, Utah after a courageous battle with cancer. She was born Jan. 28, 19:19 in Circleville, Utah to LeRoy James and Guelda Bucklar Moosman. She married Harvey R. Madsen June 2, 1958. The marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple Nov. 10, 1972. Big-eare- d What about that vampire stuff. It's all bogus? Truth: Only three species do in fact feed on blood. But they've never been near Europe, apparently even on vacation. They hail from South and Central America. "It's interesting that in the that's where the old world legend started in Eastern there are no vampire Europe bats," Rogers said. Peggy Ann Wright. She was preceded in death by her son Michael. Funeral services will be held Monday Nov. 2, 1998 at 11 a m. in the Timpview Second Ward Chapel, 950 West 1200 North, Orem where friends Mary M. Madsen d real great grandchildren. Additional survivors include her two brothers: Richard Weeks & Leland Weeks; sister, time hunting, fishing, and skiing with her family. She and Bill spent lot of time in their cabin on the J old family property at Deer Creek Park. She was a member of the I.DS Church and resided in the Orem, Payson Mayor Gordon Taylor is in the hospital recovering from a hip operation, Salem Mayor Randy Brailsford is on a hunting trip and Springville Mayor Hal Wing is out of town. She is survived by her son, Robert Wells (Valerie) Anderson, American Fork; nine grandchildren and three Monday-Saturda- y nc Euuiiii ItflUL-lHOU- CLOSED SUNDAY SYUCUU 1693 W. 774-280- Open..til 10:00 pm 27001 0 SALT UK! 300 W. OUM UVG9AU00CEN 2301 S. 461-380- 40LlVmnilyPaHtwoy actual monlhry paynwit may vary according to your account bokmcv SO. 4045 KWMAY 861L66001 wiesfYiuiw. vAun 3915 W. 4700 S. 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