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Show OBITUARIES @ From Previous Page TheSalt Lake Tribune OBITUARIES/UTAH Sunday, May 23 1999 Edith Greenwood Paxman LeSueur James Eimer Olsen James Eimet O'sen, 50. from Spring City passed away on Moy 24, {1999,inthe Hert Hills Nursing Home NephiUl aero cou: ati win Fons Paul Edward Ingebretsen 24borolaocnei enterin Poctin ughterin Ingebretsen, Woods 2 oad doughter, Dena (John) W: ct gran: daughter, LaceyNico! tounge Utah, ‘a kind demeanorand a strong spit. He tember of ineChuichof Jesus Cri! ofLotter ath it is parents. He (Jeanie) of Cle- ot ColonialoneFuneral Home, ahos ssthAve Ricotoand hut oftne Co 13a fermen waiflowa he SourGuy ey ed N5/23 Sylvia ManzanaresNieves Syivio Manzancias Nievespossed away on Thunday. Mc 79, yivio we MoNticalo, Ula onSep lo Gull formo (Bill) and Cleotes Archuleta Manzanares band andtifeiong ‘companionof 60 years, Robert Nieves in Mont: cello where they were Martied January 20, $940. Sylvia 98 a ber ot St Gammon Church 0b, Syvia touched many lives. She was a wife, mother grandmother Ghd a beautjody Her Gevotion to her faithset examples for many nerations to follow. Het faithin her church will remembered all who knew her Syivia's meticulous quilmoking was ren tol She sangike on nga nesHecuitvoice ll who Neard, She lead by excomple Hor ond tendsoomed ie hs by her saintly manners and they wil reveforget nose SEerty i, Grae seer een “You are our wite, Mom, Grandma andfiend, ihe SpringCy Cemeteryunderihe direction ot UrsenbachFuneral Home. 15/23 N5/23 Roland A. Olsen Roland A Oisen, 65, died Thursday, May 20, 999 inalocal hosp He nas bom oReider NovemberandRena 24, 1931Motin Orson Tomo haw Wisconsin doughter, Lon Olsen’ ail of Sa brothers and sisters, Roger, (Spike) No services ate planed Funeral Directors, Evans & Early 15/23 N5/23 Allon Calvin Owen,Sr. —lon Cain Owen, St hod Tight Gi his ome sumounded : = ee ee: three reatFo fandenid nit, Se wos prot Parents; wo sons, Robert Nieves, 15/22 15/23 Stratford J. Smith Stratford J. Smith, bom Jonuary 19, 1944 to Jobn P. Smith and Clara Jones Smith died May 1999. He was pre InState ondee rare ocirinistion 0 nt sening fehe 708m ArmyNs Force Bond. Heployed Tron. Jre Egor band a! Sat Al anc he Co- dialedough everything he id. Good Bye lor ou“Sweet Gore Gran Services wil De held Mon.sae 1999.01 Paxman, showed two sisters .arid Thaimon: Wo Nr ton, Saati, Wash ip (Barbara) LeSueur ‘Uioh, fine grandchildren ond 1 sredlgarcehiien Furetal services wll be nel Tuesday, Moy 26, 4999. at noon al the Monument Park tai Ward, 2258 Souh Wascicn Ba. 2690 & Family andfriends may cal Sy evening atLarkin Sunset awn, 2350 Eas | 4 Po loved his c f loved his work, but most | of all, he loved his fami ly In retirement. he lived. for is grandkids ond1 got fenpnd hunt with temyearswereabun (vie ful-time care of his Gough, Karsh Ai was 0, man's man andagrandkids grandpa Hewat laid 10 feet simpy, tenaoSRO TeniN oe MCN ao 1998 i Opder Re is suvived by his wt of 55 yeasMatra owen nschicken Potncia Om cA jon Uance) Owen €l fedAZ_Joath[Nich fosEan, Vocal CAKoren Owen Se Ut Baw le,Owen, Si. Ut and heUsawould (Mary)ike 10 Haw UT Grands (one more time sosoJose", David "Dawa" Sarah, Rebecca and Mary Ower Benomn flom’|, (Benjamin). MichaelRachel ("The © “Dora’) ar(‘Maxmibano') Espino colfome, ue choel(Hard Rock),Samuel (Som | A) Honan Owen of Sal take City Utah anAre Gea {hs “bes! end). Matinew (ker), Ro: Choe! (TheondAdmin fows of("Dora’). Keyedand.lon,Nichows hs bothers sisters WD "Buck Ow nie Ray, On Barbara Mosely. all ol Calfornc Hose vita, Speck Te omomos odes |2 15/23 The Family of Marvin E. Jacobsen sr, Wish fo thank ol the relatives and in their sympathy and condolences att his deathin February of 1999 The ones welove ate never gone, within our hearts 15/24 Condolences In Memoriam Rulon ay Harper 9/4/69 /22/89 “We MoveTheEarth” Deedee Runs — But Just for Fun Mayor Deedee Corradini, far left, leads the pack Saturday at East High for her Olympikids Furi Run. Several hundredparticipated. Theactivity aims to heighten physical fitness awareness = Festival Spotlights the Area’s Diversity tion booth, Royce Ivan Peckham 8. and auto oc Bom Jan workers wear kilts. Oneguy hada T-shirt proclaiming kilts clothing for “real men.” The Thai Buddhist Temple came from Layton with tubs of curried chicken, vegetables, rice and egg rol s. all ready to be cooked and assembled ach booth was madeup of a small counter, draped with deco- rations ofthe country, with crews Dogs walked by with their noses in the air, of cooks and helpers spilling out humans walked the stretch over and over again dumbfounded by the food choices. Thereis Hui O Hawaii, Hibernian Society, Japanese Church of Christ. Bolivian on the spot @ Continued from C-1 ociation of ke Armenian School. Greek Dance Groups, Fraternidad E] Salvador and Swiss Chorus Edelweiss to namea few At th Utah Scottish Associa tled at a table with hugeplateso! under 21 is allowed ‘I usually come down here alone. With the kids. it’s afirst Three weeks ago, 20 older mus- wherepeople couldeasily handl: them preferandhadyetto be ridden, all whatis invested in horsesthat re d I bought it because it is calm aid Vernon resident Bill Johr n. who purchased ar ungentled mustang last year and has ride it Saturd paid $275 wy brown-colored must that ady f hun to getting them adopted gentle horses before writes Monty Peopleoftenareill-prepared to deal with a wild hore,” he says. horse at BLMis focusing their experi ment on older horses that take the longest to train. andas a result take the longest to find homes, if The ULMestimates it costs at east $300 per animal to remove horses from the range and give them a veterinary examprior to adopting receive training double or triple BLM’s in in the animal Parsons ample earned roughly $400 s through his contract rid } BLMto get them to the point In Loving Memory Orlando A. Lucero 5 23 37tan - Bersoy 6/22/96 ma. where the federal govern ment could spend several thou BLMitself. but the agency should Roberts, a famed horse trainer, in his new book Shy Boy: The Horse That Came In From The Wild. KA. Miller Has Liaison To Help Employees main unadoptedorare returned Those who are unable to find homesgo toa preserve in Oklahe sanddollars on each horse's feed and veterinary care in their lif nore to their owners almost certainly But Parsons points out that even a $1,000 investment in mustang that is adopted even for the minimum of $125 is less than tangs prior to adoption y're adopted, | have success with them. whic h was the agency's goal Pickering said tangs gentled by Logan hors trainer Steve Parsons through a contract with BLM were auc. | support the BLM’s adoption programinprinciple, and I have a great deal of sympathy for the mum bid of $125 while the other fetched $275. But they did sell 9-year-old Nicolee, who found the Italian spaghetti. John had his hands full trying to feed it to 20-month-old Alex one strand at a time Those in the horse industry premium. One went for the mini Thefood dilemmawaseasy for turned the decision over to his four different brews from Desert Edge Brewery. The festival map called it the Living Traditions laud BLM's efforts to have private trainers workwith the mus- The two mustangs auctioned off Saturday at the BLM’s Wild Horse and Burro Festival re ceived two week's worth of train ing from Zane Davis. a Wisdom. Mont.. horse trainer Even with the additional train. ing, the horses were not soldat a make upUtah. It’s just too bad you haveto gointo a pentoget « over three bucks and choose from. adoption People want to own a wild e heard about this for a * she said. “It’s neatto see the different ethnic groups that American Civic League. Theyset but two have found homes, The sther two are still available for horse but they don’t want it to be valeoer Nancy Fox of Morgan. Get past the security guard, fork tioned off. Even though the horses wereolder animals than people wild,” Foremanexplains wer daughter's best friend, No one for one year guards The “beer pen” was the only complaint fromfirst-time fest John Pickering to solve — he though. and the brew must not uncommonfor novices to give up and return them to the BLM which retainstitle to the animals formed security posted at the gate. with the demand At the endof the row was a tem- Cantina @ Continued from C-1 leave the fencedarea either. Un: the back, scrambling to keep up porarywhite, plastic picket fence Mustangs Tamed Before Auction by BLM icity Sam Allo View 7hWard, 1950 East Vsconle 18600 Sout ‘en 94! mann/The Salt Lake Trily hg fay exprestes profoundgrattude to he xd cate givers af Parklane Manor and $i Villa, who provided éaith with excey care duting tne tast 15/23 24 Cards of Thanks Never nd one brother and one “Reena Moss wil be held Monday, May 24 99 of 1. om. at S PusX Cathe Chath in Sundayevening fo pa with o Scripture Servic scheduled at 8 p ot SpannNaiey Momuary Chapa in ‘Moaband 06 0 "0 To the Ge at the church intermentwil oka place attehe terice of Sunse! Memorial Cemetery Moab, Utah companied het husband on rary Ch nents. In her later years st @ Church fice Buluing ar vembe profound wisdom biesse le. Washing Norn Ullign (Phil done he Bg Hoym Academy, which was owned and Sperdled By theLBSChurch, Aer retuning fo American, Fork, she, ltended Harring Sootie mentary School and Even inough Ihe Gt , he was € 1 raised there vf the United « her parent studied he barrier for them here p withthe same barri i Cowdell would like noth etter than to break it down ; times They're really saving mone by giving them some training arson’ said. “Theonly problemis findir people to contract with BILM| providethetraining. There's n many people who enjoy work: with wild horses and even few willing to do it Glade Anderson, state wile horse manager for BLM, said i addition to providing some trait ing to mustangs prior to adoptio: his agency also wouldliketo offe more educational opportuniti: for people who want to adopt already have Those efforts would focus or increasing the success of ers. Most auctions. for ex now include clinics on training mustangs Thebetter job we do ed ing people, the more[horst be adopted and the fewe returned,” he said “Tha we're striving for ployees and this is the id ionfor somethinglike th are a small community, we ar largest employer and most of employees speak Spanish. Wi ever we can do to helpis tc benefit,” Barnard said. “I ve many employeestell me th the best position we could ever created For Kennington, theincreas: @ Continued from C-1 parental involvement at sc? has been astonishing. Pare turned out in droves for a rec Urtvennty i i rc ond has Masten in Physics fom Mictagan State Ure Juergen wor the founder of Soter Comoro. ton. located Colonia. ord XECO. ne and PS bom located in Cea Cy ich ‘te of ue Ochuever ert Cinco de Mayo celebration, tea ers are learning some Span words and parents are no lung afraid to come to school wi! we Mis questions and concerns She te Tero > the aor. Jumer and Use Nomis of YorbaUnda Dueegen wan DeecededF Gem) by het tether Getto ° ond Wier a moment k ach a coup English words while 's work leaning his boots jloves. shesaid. pointing t clean cotton They'll come here now th on e Jentifiedby thei knit glove ble to help with n his hand: repeated id. tappin acias. he said, and went back to the line more than her d g certificate in Spanish that make Cowdell k how these immigrants feel. Span sh was the first language in her e Her parents were fromAr son a day that s ied with another trip gan, this time with an 1] year-old boy who needed an iden tification card from the Division rt Vehicles No. 1 goal is retention of they know there is someone her who will listen to them,” he said One of the biggest undertaking so far as been trying to agreejust what the community needs. Cov dell has organized a committe that includes Kennington, 4. Ba local politicians and cor munity activist Leo Bravo wh he the Hispanic Communit nter in Logan It's good we have somebody over there at Miller's taking care { the people. These are the people that have the courage| do those jobs and it's important that she’s there,” Bravo 7 |