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Show Sunday, April 30, 2006 DAILY HERALD OBITUARIES Ann K. Stewart 1932-2006 Noall Thurber Wootton 1940~2006 ‘The Executioner’s Song by Norman Mailer. Mr. Wootton was well known for his kindness, integrity and humor Gity, April 26, 2006, after a one and a half year struggle with a brain tumor. She Jane Irene Oisen Day was born in Provo, Utah, on December 28, 1932, to Eimer Louis and La 1927 ~2006 Verne Page Kammermeyer. Ann grew up in Provo, attending Farrer Junior High and Provo High Jane Irene Olsen Day, 78, quietly passed away the morning of 27 Hewas an excellent trial attorney, Irene was the mother of six children and a faithful member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She served in numerous positions including: Relief Society President, President, Stake ly beloved Sam and Ben with whom he spent manyhours baking cookies, carving pumpkins, or playing with his elor's degree from Brigham Young Universityin 1960, He received a Juris Doctorate from the University Irene was preceded ir. death by her beloved husband of 45 years, son, Carl B. Day (d. 1963): daughter, Valerie E. Day (d. 1965); her parents and Berkeley, California. Brother. and 2 sisters. She is survived by her most of her youth Michael Kammermeyer and sister, Kammermeyer Wagner. Wewould liketo thank the Community Nursing Service Hospice Program and caregivers who so sister, Donnetta Smith; her other 4 on Hollywood Ave. She graduated children, Victoria (Glade) Hamilton from South High School in 1944 and of Cedar City, UT; Janice (Brian) wentto work at Bell Telephone for Wright of Laurel, MD; Wayne tance operator for a good portion of that time,fighting hardto get Dayof Irvine, CA; 6 grandchildren and3 great-grandchildren. the next 5 years. She was a long dis- soldier's call through during WWII Irene married Bartley E. Day (Nancy) Dayof Sandy, UT; Dean A viewing will be held Monday, May| from to 8 pm in the Ander- on 29 Dec 1949 in the Salt Lake Temple. Irene spentthe next 22 son & Sons Mortuary, 49 E 100 N, American Fork. Graveside service Bart to various assignments in the military. Theylived in Germany, Texas,Oklahoma, Colorado, Kan- the Alpine Cemetery. years ofherlife accompanying sas, Maryland, Virginia and finally settled in Orem, Utah. will be held Tues, May 2 at I.pm in their children grandchildren, along with travel and continued self education. 3 lovingly assisted the familyin her For two plus decades she was deeply involved with the Utah Mu- care. ‘Amemorial service will be seum of Fine Arts at the University of Utah. When she became ill, the museum established a memorial to her love of the museum and the ance of maintenance and restoration of the precious items in the museum collection. Wewill miss her dearly, but what She is survived by her husband, a joyous reunion awaits her. God J. Robert Stewart M.D., her four be with you, Mother,‘til we meet again, nine grandchildr Salt Lake City, Portland, Oregon, Church, 670 South 1100 East in Salt LakeCity. Street parking has been approved for the service. Funeral Directors, Neil O'Donnell and Sons. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Ann K. Stewart Memorial Fund for Restoration at the UMFA(Utah Museum of Fine Art), University of Utah, 410 Campus Center Drive,Salt Lake City, UT 84112. of Utah School of Law in 1963. Also in 1963, he married Irene Barnes Nemelka with whom he had three children,Lisa, Chris andLeslie. In 1963, Mr. Wootton established a lawfirm in American Fork where he practiced with his father, At- torney O. Devere Wootton until Devere's death in 1980. Mr. Woot ton worked as a private attorney in American Fork for over 42 years. In 1972, Mr. Wootton joined the Utah County Attorney's Office as a Deputy CountyAttorney. In 1974 train set. In his younger years he was a skilled horseman, and time with his friends and family who adored him. In January, 2006 he married his long timefriend and devoted companion, NancyOlson with whom he had shared 23 years and who cared for him each dayuntil he died. Mr. Wootton is survived by his wife, Nancy Wootton; mother Nora Prows Wootton;children Lisa W. Nagel-Jerman, Christopher N Wootton and Leslie Wootton;stepdaughter, Kimberly Olson Sieber; brothers D. Gareth Wootton (Bar- he was elected Utah CountyAttorneyand served in that capacity for three successive termsof office from 1974 to 1986. bara) andJ. Sterling Wootton (Tam- prosecuted several well-known held for Mr. Wootton at the Warenski Funeral Home, 1776 North 900 East, American Fork, Utah on Duringthis time, Mr. Wootton cases including the controversial murdercaseofState v. Gary Gilmorein 1976, which, at the time, was the first U.S. case toattach the death penalty in overa decade and becamethe subject of the novel, my); and grandchildren. Tohis family, he was an extraordinary source ofboth gentleness and strength. A memorial gatheringwill be Tuesday, May 2, 2006 from 10:00 to 11:45 a.m. tobe followed by interment at the American Fork City Cemetery Californians favor immigration reform Mak z. Barabak Californians generally favor a carrot-and-stick approach to illegal immigration, mixing tougherborder enforcement with a guest-worker program and a pathwayto citizenship for people already in the United States, according to a new Los Angeles TimesPoll By a ratio of more than 3 to 1, those surveyed said they preferred a comprehensive ap- gal immigration wasoneof the most important problems facing California. That compared with 13 percent who gavethatresponse in a statewide surveyin October, before congressional action ard mass demonstrations across the country. vaulted the immigrationissue to heightened attention. “It's a serious problem,” poll participant Greg Hoshabekian, 53, said in-a follow-up interview. Hoshabekian,a semi-retired law enforcementofficer who proachto the immigrationissue, lives in Apple Valley, has no confidencethatpoliticians will which President Bush anda bifind a solution. “I'll start learnpartisan group of U.S. senators ing Spanish, I guess.” advocate, rather than the more The Times Pol, which found punitivelegislation passed by most Californians unhappy with the Houseof Representatives. Lawmakerson CapitolHill have Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's overall performance,also spent months trying to reconcile those conflicting proposals. turned up poor marksfor his handling of the immigration Support for a broader apissue. The governorlast year proachtoillegal immigration praised the freelance border was shared by Californians of patrol launched by the Minuteall political persuasions and man Militia. But more recently residents throughoutthe state, he has condemned talk in Con“regardless of wheretheylived. Overall, there was little differ.gress of a border fence - - callenceof opinion between Latinos ingit a return to “the Stone Ages” — and advocated incenand whites, although Latinos tives as well as tough enforcewere somewhat more supportmentto address the nation’s ive of a guest-worker program illegal immigration problem. and morestrongly opposed to Overall, 49 percent of those building a fence proposed along surveyed disapproved of the U.S.-Mexico border to curb Schwarzenegger's handling of illegal entry. In general, Californians were the issue while 28 percent apmarginally more supportive of a two-track approachto immigration than Americans as a whole. But residents here also viewed illegal immigration as a bigger problem than most Americans. Morethan four in 10 Californians considered it one of the biggest problems facing the country, compared to three in 10 of those surveyed eee Va NN vf ON A BUSINESS MONEY MARKET ACCOUNT THANKS TO MYNEW SBA LOAN proved. Nearly six in 10 Latinos dis- approved of the governor's performance on immigration compared with fewer than five in 10 whites. The Times Poll, under the supervision of director Susan Pinkus, interviewed 1,863 Cali- fornians from April 21 through April 27. The margin of sampling error was plus or minus 2 national ‘And theconcern ofCalifornians hadrisenat least as the issueaffects their homestate. In an open-ended question, 34 percentof respondentssaid ille- percentagepoints. The national survey on immigration issues was conducted April 8-11 and had a margin oferrorof 3 percentage points. “Gem Talk” WEARA FALLEN STAR Wil Feller Catch and wear a falling nat stones to hold them in star? All silver tarnishes. Store it in por silvercloth bags.Polishing can provide a variety “< ferent finishes from a soft matte glow to a Silver, like pol is too “mirror finish”. Mirrorfinishsoft to use for jewelry in its es show finger mark and} pure form. 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