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Show THE DAILY HERALD, Provo. Utah, Sunday, March ?MSe A4 10, 1996 Hatch critical of Micron's slowdown ObituQiios r Clayton Denton Glade Liddiard - Clayton Denton Liddiard, age 80. of Provo, passed away Friday, March 8, 1996, at Utah Valley Regional Medical center in Provo, Utah. He was born sr. October.23, 1915, in Provd. the second child of John Albert and Vera Garrett Liddiard. He married Doris E. Mower on November 4, 1939, in Provo. He was' a life long resident of Provo. He attended Provo City schools, graduating from Provo High School. Throughout his life he worked on various construction projects and in related fields. He worked at Provo Steel and Supply as a foreman and sales engineer, retiring after 38 years. He was a member of the LDS Church, recently serving as a home teacher. He was loved and respected by his family, many friends and associates. He enjoyed woodworking and was a fine craftsman. He was also an avid hunter and fisherman. He devoted many hours working on genealogy and family history. He loved reading and telling stories. He is survived by his wife, of Provo; one son and three daughters: Dan-elClayton Liddiard (Mary Ann), of Provo; Janet Leonard (Robert), of Murray; Colleen Dore (Rodney), of Fremont. California; Barbara Anderson (Joe), of Benjamin; 15 grandchildren; 12 greatgrandchildren; 3 brothers and 2 sisters: Preston G. Liddiard, of Springville; Kenneth "Dick" Liddiard, of Provo; Bert Liddiard, of Spanish Fork; Ldith Richardson, of Olyrrtpia, Washington; Elva Ungricht, of Provo. He was preceded in death by a brother, Duane Albert "Bobby" Liddiard. Funeral services will be held on Monat 2 p.m. at the day, March II, Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo, 185 East Center on Sunday evening 8 p.m. or on Monday one hour prior to services. Interment Provo City Cemetery. jMi- in 19, 6-- , Hannah Yalgardson Spanish Fork - Hannah Valgardson, age 78, died Friday, March 8, 1996, at Xhp East Lake Care Center of Provo. She wk born April 21, 1917, in Spanish Fork, Utah, A daughter of Ephriam S. Valgardsorr and Sarah Peterson. She attended public schools in" Spanish Fork " '. and Canada.- She retired from the Social Center as i; owneroperator after 45 years of service (o the community. She had worked for the LDS Church at the Lion House and for President George Albert Smith as a housekeeper and cook. During World War II she worked for a munitions plant in Salt Lake. Active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, she served in the South Eastern States Mis- Was a teacher in the slbn in 1938-3Primary and Sunday School and served on the Stake Sunday School board. She was! h kind, honest and individualist. She loved children and was known as the candy lady to all the neighborhood children. 1 Survivors are two brothers and seven sisters: Paul Valgardson of Provo; Sara Ellen Hanks of Salem; Fay Bearnson of Spanish Fork; Berta Johnson and Wilma .' Harmer both of Springville; Elva . Levanger, Sherman Beamson both of Spanish Fork; Geraldine Smith of Pro- . and Norma Jones of Spanish Fork. Preceded 9 death by her parents and two sitterV, Mildred Ha8 and Bern ice ". Bearnson. ' '. ; Funeral services will be Tuesday at I p.m. itf the Spanish Fork Stake Center. 0005 E 200 South, Spanish Fork. ' Friends may call Monday evening from 6-- 8 ; p.m. at the Walker Mortuary and ' Tuesday one hour prior to services at the church. Burial will fee' hs the Spanish : " Fork City Cemetery: Fain ieu - GtoJe Weston Mower passed away at his home on March 8, He was born June 28. 1935, in Fairview. Utah to Heber Lavern and Ethel Stewart Mower. He served in the Southwest Indian Mission of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints. In 1957. he married Virginia Lane Anderson in the Manti Temple. He graduated from Brigham Young University and did extensive work. He taught business at North Sanpete High School. He owned and operated a farm in Fairview. He served as Chairman of the Sanpete County Soil Conservation District. He was President of the Sanpete City Ditch Company. He was a Trustee of the Sanpete Valley Hospital. He was a member of ihe Sanpete County Water Conservancy Board. He previously served on the Fairview City Council. In The Church of Jesus Christ of -day Saints he served as a teacher and leader of youth. He was Stake Mission President. Bishop's Counselor, Stake y "' 'VJ- Graham " .: Our loving mother, Jane Graham died March 2, J996, of Pneumonia in Provo. She was Born Septembet 12, 1900. in m. ! DavkJ Janjrsw and I nwfcd. x H . I Cemetery. The family suggests donations to the Sanpete Valley Hospital Foundation for the purchase of equip- Josephine Cannon Crook. 75. died March 7. 1996. in Santaquin. Utah. Born April 6. 1920, St. George. Utah to Raymond Cannon and Elizabeth Matilda As Truman. a young woman she worked as a professional beautician, and recently as a Senior Companion at the Care Center in Payson. Married Darwin Lynn Crook on February 15, 1940, in St. George. Later sealed in the Manti Temple. Moving to Santaquin in 1942, she served in the Relief Society, Sunday School, and Young Women's programs: served a mission with Lynn at the Mormon Battalion Visitor Center in San Diego, California, and as a temple John married Elliott Westphal on 2, September 1968. in Provo. He preceded her in death on March 10, Victor L. Ludlow, a Brigham Young University professor of ancient scripture, will conduct five Passover Seder Services during the weeks surrounding Palm Sunday. Passover services will be at the Wilkinson Center Skyroom at 6:30 p.m. on March 23, 27 and 30 and and 13. The service tradiApril tionally lasts three and a half hours. Two hundred guests may participate in the event each night. Tickets are $12 for BYU students, faculty, staff and alumni and $15 for the public. Tickets must be Rob-bins- 's 1988. Mabel was a life time resident of Provo. She attended Provo City schools, and was a member of the Provo High School Swimming Team, under the direction of Professor Leaf. She played softball for Dennie Own Softball Team under the direction of Byron Denhalter. Mabel was employed by several grocery stores through the years, including the Second Ward Market, where she remained for several years, under Ihe management of four different managers. She later worked for Hailaday's Market. She was a member of the LDS Church, and had served as secretary in the Sunday School, and the YWMIA. and also served as a visiting teacher in the Relief Society. She enjoyed knitting and gardening. She was a member of the Daughter of the Utah Pioneers Camp 3. 1 center. B32!b Uotico Elmer K Robinson, 87, of Mapleton, died Mar. 8, 1996. Services are pending. Utah's serpents take BYU Public Communications f at 271 book ing (801)378-505"There has been no compilation of all the snakes in Utah in this kind of field guide format," Cox said. "I felt it was time to do something about it." Cox began the guide four years ago, individually tracking down each species of snake in order to photograph it. Mark Philbrick, university photographer at BYU, is responsible for the detailed, colorful pictures. The final result is a complete guide to Utah's 33 varieties of snakes. "When the book was practically on the press, someone came into my office with a new species of snake," Cox said. "We then went back and added this snake to the book so that it would be 100 percent complete." 1. Tax education award given to BYU Passover sacrifice, the matzah and the bitter herb has not properly observed this Festival." Guests will have the opportunity to partake of the symbolic food. They are offered lamb shank bone as a symbol of the Passover sacrifice to remember how the "Holy One" passed over the houses of Israelites in Egypt. The matzah is to remind how Israelites took unleavened dough as they hastily journeyed from Egypt. The bitter herbs are to remind of the bitterness of Israel's bondage to the Egyptians. "Those who come to the celebration never forget the experience of partaking of the symbolic food, especially the bitter herbs," Smith ' professor A Brigham Young University professor was awarded the Ray M. Sommerfeld Outstanding Tax Educator Aw ard at the American Accounting Association's 1995 annual meeting. G. Fred Streuling, a professor in BYU's School of Accountancy and Information Systems (SOAIS), was honored as the third recipient of the award during the recent national meeting of accounting professors in Orlando, Fla. The award recognizes outstanding contributions by a faculty member teaching taxation at a recognized academic institution. The selection was based on contributions to accounting and tax education, including curriculum development, superior teaching and participation in student and professional activities. In 1976, Streuling joined the BYU faculty where he helped, as both a professor and as SOAIS director, to propel BYU's accounting program to its current ranking as the third best accounting program in the United States. said. Other symbolic traditions guests participate in include the toasting and drinking of grape juice, washing of the hands and the Hillel sandwich, a reminder of the temple days. A Passover meal is served and is concluded with the Afikomen (dessert). Throughout the service, Ludlow relates the Passover with traditions of the restored gospel, and how everything symbolizes the coming of Christ. He discusses the importance of the empty place left for Elijah. He also addresses the Holocaust and expresses his closeness to the Jews. Many people from the Jewish community in Salt Lake City have come to participate in the celebration at BYU in past years. JACKSON & PERKINS PANSIES, ETC. Now Available ROHBOCK'SA FUNERAL FLOWERS 678 S. Main 225-300' nt-- St, Oram 3 jt.mAr Smrrinf Utmh County Sine . 192i 435 South Geneva Rd. Orem 225-435- 7 BEESLEY MEMORIALS We are now in our 101st year in the l maim tomitw to A&i HHim monument business. Our experience means you get quality, beauty and value in memorials for your loved ones. f 3. , Snakes may be fascinating, but the assistant director of Brigharri Young University' s Monte LL Bean Museum believes that because those who encounter snakes in nature are often so startled, they seldom watch Ion i enough to learn much. Douglas Cox has teamed up with former BYU faculty member Wilmer Tanner to create a fieltl ' guide to this remarkable creature. Snakes of Utah came about because of Cox's interest in helping L'tahns gain an appreciation for the beauty, graceful design and unique characteristics of Utah snakes. , The book is available in the Beari Museum gift shop or by call: .... advance 378-361- 6-- 8 in in Joseph Smith Building or by phone at (801) Once a service is sold out, interested parties may be placed on a waiting list. Ludlow initiated the Passover celebration tradition at BYU 20 years ago with his Old Testament classes. Interest in the celebration grew until Ludlow expanded the program to multiple nights and included the public. Tickets are in such high demand that a participant list is started one year in advance. "I think the celebration is so popular because there is a yearning to know more about the Jewish heritage and to understand the culture," said Patty Smith from Religious Education. "The celebration is a spiritual experience, but it is also exciting and fun." Ludlow explains the symbolism of the Passover during the celebration. In the Passover program, it is further noted that "The remembrance of the exodus of our fathers from Egypt will never fail to inspire us with new courage, and the symbols of this festival always help to strengthen our faith in God, Redeemer of the oppressed. Thus our ancient teacher Rabban Gamaliel taught: "Whoever does not well consider the meaning of these three symbols the Preceded in death by a daughter, son and brother. Survived by her husband Lynn; sons: Kenneth Crook, Salt Lake; Bradley Crook. Santaquin; Edmund Mrs. Dix, Provo; and daughter-in-laArthur (Karen) Dix, Santaquin; sisters: Florence Lamb Ewell, Genola; Helen Madsen, Richland, Washington; Muriel Mathis. Monroe; Aileen Schumtz, St. George; 18 grandchildren and one greatgrandchild. She will be remembered as a loving wife, mother, grandmother, and friend. Funeral services will be Monday, March II, 1996, at II a.m. at the Santaquin, Utah Stake Center, 90 S 200 East. Friends may call at Holladay Hills p.m. and Mortuary. Sunday evening one hour before the services at the stake center stage 1 purchased worker. J. step-son- s: Series popular; participant list started early nt industry-governme- professor hosts Passover services Josephine Cannon Crook Mabel Olsen Westphal. age 87, of Provo. passed away March 7, 1996, in Provo. of causes incident to age. She was born February 23, 1909, in Provo, to Ole E. Olsen and Sarah Ellen "Nellie" Jones. She low-price- BYU ment in his name. O. Nielsen and husband E. Leon Nielsen of Provo; and two sisters-in-laPhyllU Smart Olsen of Provo, now serving a LDS Mission in London; Mrs. Leona Olsen of Provo. She was preceded in death by four brothers: LeRoy, Ralph Reed, Horace Glenn and Marion J. Olsen. The family would like to express their sincere appreciation to the nurses at the East Lake Care Center, and also the nurses of Hospice, for their tender loving care. Funeral services will be held Mondayj March II, 1996, at ll a.m. in the Ber$ Drawing Room Chapel, 185 East Centef Street, Provo. Friends may call at the Mortuary Sunday evening, from 6-- 8 p.ml or Monday morning one hour prior to serj vices: Interment, Provo City Cemetery, j i: Mary Amelia "Jane" . Col- City Mabel Westphal Mabel is survived by three 1 : Fairview; four grandchildren: A.J., by, Ashlee Mower, and Korieann Jensen; two brothers and two sisters: Morris and Salt Marvin Mower, Cleo Spencer, Lake, and Ila Larsen, Orem, Utah. Preceded in death by brother, Royal Mower. Funeral services w ill be held Tuesday. March 12, 1996. at the Fairview First and Fourth Ward Chapel, at 12 noon. There will be a viewing from 10 a.m. until time of serv ices. The family will be at home on Monday evening from 6-- 8 p.m. Interment will be in the Fairview Latter- M ' Mower High Councilman, Counselor in the Mt. Pleasant (Utah) Stake Presidency, and was serv ing as Bishop of the Snow College Second Ward in the Snow College Stake. He is survived by his wife, Virginia; son, Scott and his wife Jackee, Orem, Utah; Clark. Salt Lake City; daughter, Kristen and her husband Quedell Jensen, 19. Dwain Westphal of Orcm; Fred Lee Westphal of Provo; and Gary J. Westphal of Orem; one brother and two sisters! George Albert Olsen of Orem; Mrs. Joy W. (Bertha O.) Nielsen of Provo; Ardith : ,.,V VV. would never have happened in the last decade without strong American trade law s," Hatch said. "Micron, along with other industry leaders, have experienced a $4.3 billion growth because of agreements between the U.S. and Japan." The senator said the mushroom demand is being met with unprecedented manufacturing worldwide, especially in Japan and Korea, w ith China expected to come on line by the end of this century. Hatch's staff said the Utah senator intervened last Korea's SamAugust and was successful in getting in the Unitto sung industry stop dumping microchips ed States. Hatch said that because of lacking or unfair trade agreements the United Slates was virtually eliminated from the semiconductor business in the early 1980s. "With the creation of an recovery effort, coupled with the "88 semiconductor agreement with Japan, the U.S. was reestablished as the world's number one chip maker," Hatch added. Sen. Orrin Hatch is speaking out on Micron's recent announcement that it will mothball its Lehi semiconductor plant. Utah's senior senator said Micron's slowdown emphasizes the need for better trade agreements. The Republican said agreements are necessary to assure U.S. semiconductor companies have access to markets abroad and also to prevent the pirating of U.S. chip technology and to protect foreign semicond ductor manufacturers from dumping chips on the American market. Hatch is urging Japan to continue its joint semiconductor agreement. And on the eve of a meeting between Japanese Prime Minister Ryutara Hashimoto and President Clinton, Hatch sent a letter to Hashimoto that w as also signed by 14 other senators. The letter urges renewal of the 1988 chip agreement which assures this country a 20 percent market share in Japan. "The explosive growth in the semiconductor field jwf'i'M HI M vU'WOTi . WH-- OBITUARY FEES The Daily Herald charges for obituaries. Death notices, brief items identifying the deceased and the funeral home involved however, run free of charge. BEESLEY MONUMENT AND VAULT CO. 725 South State 900 East, Provo Across the street east Phone Information concerning The Daily Herald obituary rates is available from the newspaper's Classified Ad department, 373-645- 0 or from any Utah County Mortuary. DEADLINES of Provo Cemetary 374-058- 0 Walker Mortuary in Proco, Orem, Spanish Fork 3 p.m. day before publication. If sent by modem, 8:30 a.m. day of publication. Photo deadlines same as above. ) and Payson A Funeral Should Be One More Fond Memory of a LoviOne. in Boite; Montana,' but lived many Years in California. she In 1986, moved to Utah with her daughter and son-i- n law and lived at Cove Point for four years. Then she lived with her daughter and and Joe Wright for ' two years, atLloydine which time the moved to East Lake Care Center. The family would like to thank the staff at East take for their loving kindness and com- -' , passion to our dear mother. Jane is sur-- .. Pierce . Mved by her daughKr, Virginia --r. tnd her husband Court; a son, LcRoy . hughes; a daughter, Lloydine Wright and her husband, Joe; and a son. Paul Graham and his wife Nancy; grand2 children; 24 She was preceded in death by her husband, Richard Qraham. parents, a sister and two Mother wrll be missed ' Sy ftnwf most espe AwrSi services cially by Wfafc. will be held on Wednesday. March 13. at II a.m. at the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Friends may Call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo, 185 one hour East Center, on jfctw to lervicwTjCv&tde Services Win be held at the KoseHills Cemetery m Cairfomaj on Wfcwfey. Marcli 20. 1996. at a.m. t s"M " : son-in-la- y i yi i tff9mvvf'to 'imiifritmtliw ftrtiiiiffttttffl W'lh ?-H- I' - Mil ift ror nuw 1 1 19, Wf-nd- .". families i:ri. -- fit than fifty years, VafiiwNifcrRiary has been helping Utah Valley aure that their last memory tuary provides the kind of personal, o -- ni-vHi. csll t gixj one. VTalher Mor- attention that is becoming increasingly rare at larger funeral homes. When you choose Walker Mortu ary, vou can concern yourself less with details and more with the memories of vour loved one. home-tow- n : WALKER t)tti (tifti!lln!ltlli- MORTUARY - Sy .- in a LnvJ one is a PKOVO: 85 ORKM: Ht 3X) souid 226-350- PAYSON: W7 Smith . I 37 F.ml Home - 640 l .t NMI Nrt, SPANISH FORK: 17 Souil. Main Stct 7V8 2169 Taker-S-nim- KMI i 465-384- 0 |