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The Independent-Record from Helena, Montana • 8
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The Independent-Record from Helena, Montana • 8

Location:
Helena, Montana
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8A tThe Independent Record. Helena Mont. Mondav. September 19, 19flfl Slate to buy Lake Helena land The state Board of Land Commissioners today approved the Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks purchase of 157 acres near Lake Helena to provide public access for waterfowl hunting. The land, located about 10 mues north of Helena, will be bought for $110,000.

Lyle, Lyle Cro- Can on TV codile the Double Dare Moneyline Crossfire PrimeNews Musical Mister Ed Patty Duke Movie "Night Song" Sq 1 TV MacNeil World Monitor Towards 2000 Lehrer Animal World Business Rpt Animal World Movie "Lady Scarface National Geo-Wild Orphans graphic Wildlife Chron Gunga Din Movie Night Hollywood Niagara Falls Rendezvous Song' Canada True Equinox North My 3 Sons Donna Reed Larry King Live Movie-' A Fine Mess" Outage rr.w.wigiKLTO1 1 A winteY storm- that swept across the state Saturday brought a mixture of rain and snow, with accumulations of 7 inches in Great Falls, 3 inches in Butte and 1 inch in Helena (thats the official measurement! at the Helena Airport, upper parts of town received 3 to 4 inches of snow). About 5,000 customers in the Great Falls area, were without power and another 1,000 were affected in and around Butte. Customers within Helena and East Helena city limits were affected little by the storm, Maehl said, but just about every community outside of town had problems. Lincoln, Wolf Creek, Craig, Winston, McClellan Creek, Alhambra, Clancy, Boulder, Ellis-ton and Avon all had major outages, he said. Townsend and White Sulphur Springs both escaped outages.

New? Sat Night SCTV Encyclopedia Moneyline Sports Movie 'Big Shots RowanMartin Car 54 Newsmght RoomDaddy Exec Stress Nature of Movie "Three Ann Sothern Movie "Lady Ideas Things pulling out of the Canyon Creek fire and officials said the entire firefighting force would be gone byTuesday. The Canyon Creek fire will be turned over to the Lolo, Lewis (and Clark) and Helena national forests. IN YELLOWSTONE, Clouds dominated the skies today, keeping morning temperatures in the 20s and low 30s and limiting activity in the fires there. Officials welcomed the continuing break in fire activity, given forecasts for warming temperatures later in the week. The fires gained no ground Sunday.

A cold front brought from one-half inch to 3 inches of snow to the park Sunday- Politics 88 0 Clock High" Mister Ed Scarface" Coaches World Monitor Newsmght Up- Patty Duke MoyersMyth Small Planet 4 Seasons for Strug Poland North America date Movie 'Meat- Donna Reed Movie "Night Sports balls III" Sat Night Song Complete TV listings are carried each Friday in Lthe IR's Your Time section. TCI Cable Vision You Could Have Cable TV For 52 A Day 443-3401 Faye Roberts Faye A. Fazie Roberts, 64, of 936 Prospect died Saturday at her home, following an extended illness. She was born in Lincoln, on Aug. 23, 1924, attended Lincoln High School and graduated from the University of Nebraska as a medical lab technician.

Fires ContirtUedirotTfePagaflAr She said flights over the fire on Sunday showed just a couple of spots that were still smoking. This rain has just had a great effect on the fire, she said. Backcountry trails and campgrounds in Glacier were reopened, but with some restrictions, after wet weather reduced fire danger. The park also resumed its collection of entrance and camping fees. There was snow'at the higher elevations, said park spokeswoman Karen Whitney.

They measured 5 inches at 6,000 feet. Firelighters also continued Asked about the odd rule, a volleyball official observed: It might be that some of the teams sweat too much. Gumbel could hardly let that pass by. Kind of makes light of the old phrase no sweat, he noted. Technically, television has by-now got this kind of coverage down to razzle-dazzle perfection.

As the scene flits from event to event, expert camera work is simply taken for granted. But there is still room for the extraordinary. There was, for instance, the memorable shot of free-fall skydivers forming in the air the five circles that are the symbol of the Olympics. The camera was attached to the helmet of another skydiver, who floated above them recording the formation. As Gumbel is wont to say: Nice touch! Commercialization continues unabated.

The broadcasts invariably begin with an upfront fanfare for the biggest sponsor ed in Nevada, Mo. In 1938, she married Ross Clemensen. They moved to Wichita, Kan. The Clemensens were both employed by Boeing Aircraft Company. In 1962 they came to Montana.

They owned and operated a resort at Big Arm on Flathead Lake in the late 1970s. They later retired, and moved to Helena in 1981. Mrs. Clemensen was active in various civic organizations throughout her lifetime. She enjoyed fishing, camping, bowling and gemstone hunting.

Survivors include her husband, Ross of Helena; one daughter, Judy Hegland of Great Falls; one son, Mike of St. Charles, one brother, Richard Ralston of Nevada, four grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and numerous nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be Tuesday at 2 p.m. at Herrmann and Company Funeral Home. The Rev.

Rick DeMato of Liberty Baptist Church will officiate. Cremation and interment will be at Sunset Memorial Gardens following services. Clancy The soils in Clancy are very porous, said Baril. Any type of accident or over-application, or leak in a spray vehicle or tank would be more likely to enter the groundwater. We may never know what the exact situation, was that caused it, he added.

The department has been looking for Tordon in Clancy since July, after a resident complained of damage to flower gardens. Filtration systems on the market can cut the residue levels to between 0.1 and 1 ppb. The 12-inch tanks with activated charcoal and bedding gravel cost about $1,000 installed, and should be cleaned every two weeks, for $75 to $125 each time. hearing help for Nerve Deafness If you hear, but dont always understand the words, Miracle-Ear1 may be your answer. Miracle-Ear can help many 1 people overcome problems like hearing only parts of straining to asking Others to becoming confused when spoken to.

These are classic symptoms Miracle i Helena Hearing Aid Service 1800 Uth Ave Suite 449 7000 Office Hours. Mon Fri 9-3 Permanent Full Time Location SportsCenter TheLofax NFL Matchup Donald Duck CBS News Wheel-Fortune Gr Sports Le- Kids Inc gends Edison Twins Newhart Cavanaughs Swimsuit 88 Care Bears in Wonderland Movie "A Stranger Muscle Maga- zine Special Strawberry Waits NFL Trivia Sw-ss Family SportsCenter Robinson News Newhart SpcH NFL Yearbook tie Marne Hunter NFL Greatest Moments "Under the In- SportsLook fluence" SportsCenter Jeremiah Catherine Lyle Catherine Patricia Lyle of Peoria Heights, 111., died Sept. 17 in a Peoria Hospital of natural causes. She was born in Helena on March 7, 1921, to George and Margaret Kramer of Helena. She attended grade school at St.

Helenas and graduated from Helena High in 1938. She attended nursing school in Springfield, 111., and graduated with an R.N. degree. She married John F. Lyle of Peoria Heights, in August of 1941 in Canada.

Survivors include a son, Hyland Lyle of Novi, daughters, Barbara Burns and Sheryl Cokley, both of Peoria; one grandson; five granddaughters; a brother, Gene Kramer of Helena; and sisters-in-law, Mrs. Wally Gleason of Peoria, and Eleanor and Lynne Kramer, both of Helena; and a brother-in-law, Frank Lyle of Peoria, Services will be Tuesday at 10 a.m. at, St. Thomas Church, Peoria, and burial will be in American Mausoleum. Visitation was today.

Vernard Hanson Vernard H. Hanson, 73, of 1011 11th died at the Veterans Center at Fort Harrison Saturday. He' was born Sept. 11, 1915, in Montevideo, to Louis A. and Hannah Hanson.

He married Cathryn Jane Miller on June 17, 1938, in Ronan. He was employed by the Associated Seed Growers in Ronan in 1935. He was transferred to Bozeman, and in 1940, he was transferred to New Haven, where he worked in the Associated Seed Growers import export department. He was then transferred back to Bozeman in 1942. He entered the army in 1944.

He did his basic training in Texas and was sent to Fort Dix, N.J. He served as sergeant major of the separation center there until March of 1946. He was discharged in December of 1946. He returned to Bozeman, again working for Associated Seed, and also attended Montana State College, majoring in accounting. He managed the Eagles Club in Bozeman for two years and came to Helena in 1957.

He was employed as the assistant adjutant for the American Legion Department of Montana. In 1960 he was employed by the Montana State Bank Examiners as consumer loan commissioner. He later served as head of the university auditors. He was appointed international auditor for the Hotel and Restaurant International Union based in Ohio in 1965. He traveled 11 southeast states.

In 1967, he was appointed administrative assistant to the general secretary of the Hotel and Restaurant International Union and was transferred to the home office in Cin ABC News News TV ContinuedirorrfPageilA) As it turns out, Gumbel is not on camera all that much. The various sporting events have their own announcers. But Gumbel sets the tone for the prime-time coverage and he does so with remarkable style. He is smooth and articulate. Better yet, he has a sense of humor and perspective.

When the co-anchor Dick Enberg spotted Princess Cristina leading Spains contingent in the parade of nations, his dissertation on royalty becoming just one of the crowd ih the democratic Olympics was cut short by a chuckling Gumbel: But I wonder if she stays in the Olympic Village; lets not carry this thing too far. During Saturday nights telecast of a volleyball match between the United States and Japan, a top Japanese player was injured after slipping. It seems the rules forbid players to wipe water from the floor during a game in progress. cinnati. He later returned to auditing and traveled many states, including Alaska, until his retirement on Dec.

1, 1982. He was preceded in death by his parents and one sister. He was past commander of the Gallatin American Legion Post No. 14 in Bozeman. He was a member of the Eagles Lodge, Bozeman; Moose Lodge, Lewis-town; Hotel, Restaurant and Bartenders Local, Butte; and the BPOE No.

193 Elks, Helena. Survivors include his Jane of Helena; one son, Renard Hanson of Helena; one daughter, Christine Figueroa of Venice Beach, a half-brother, Vernon Hanson of California; a June Skrukrud of Bozeman; two grandchildren; pnd two nieces. Cremation has taken place. Memorial services will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Retz Funeral Chapel with the Very Rev.

Arch Hewitt officiating. Interment of cremated remains will be in the Montana Veterans Cemetery in Fort Harrison. Miriam Moody Miriam Moody, 68, died Saturday in St. Johns Lutheran Home, Billings Heights, after a lengthy illness.Born in Illinois, a daughter of Sam and Bertha Crabtree, she attended schools and a year of college in Illinois. On Feb.

7, 1943, she married Robert Moody in Peoria, he died in April 1988. She and her husband moved to Helena in 1946 and she was secretary in the- Helena Junior High School from 1957 until retiring in 1972, She did volunteer work for different charitable organizations, taught Sunday school, sang in the choir and was an elder of First Christian Church. She was a member of PEO and enjoyed singing at weddings and church services. Survivors include a daughter, Janet Stiles of Broadview; two sons, Jim of Billings and Steve of Downey, a sister, Floy Rieder of Great Falls; and seven grandchildren. Memorial services will be Wednesday at 10 a.m.

at First Christian Church. Smith Downtown Chapel, Billings, and Retz funeral Home are in charge of arrangements. Ruth Clcmensen Ruth Clemensen, 69, of 24L Lincoln Rd. West, died at St. Peters Hospital Saturday after a long illness.

She was born in Lawton, Okla to Edmond and Vergie Ralston on June 13, 1919. She was educat spenders: Brought to you by Pontiac, by Budweiser, by McDonalds and by Visa in short, by Madison Avenue. Unfortunately, the commercials created especially for the, event children and the flag are particularly prominent begin to wear thin with repeated exposure. But theres more. Consider the fans at the volleyball match with a banner thanking Seagrams Coolers.

Or Bart Conner, a gymnastics commentator, getting in a plug for his Jockey underwear ads. And then there are the athletes themselves and their lucrative deals. One member of the Yugoslav basketball team, we were told in midgame, has signed a contract to play with Real Madrid in Spain for $1.5 million tax free. At some point, the eagerness to sell everything in sight begins to produce, at the very least, acid indigestion. NBC has made some miscalculations.

The Broadcast Center set, for one thing, looks like a pompous pulpit. And there are moments of decidedly bad taste. Someone, for instance, decided to turn a tape of a basketball game between Egypt and China into speeded-up comic relief. Neither team may be terribly impressive, in United States terms, but the players and their supporters deserve respect. Ridicule is out of place.

It merely opens NBCs coverage up to the same criticism that greeted the overly casual U.S. athletes in the parade of nations, Youthful American enthusiasm, as Gumble described it, can some-' times be mistaken for arrogance or, at the very least, rudeness. Also a bad moment was Sunday nights attempt by an NBC newsman to shove his way, while the camera rolled, into the locker room to interview the U.S. boxer who had failed to show up for his fight on time. While fellow boxers and coaches tried to push the news crew out, you could hear the newsman demanding Dont try to orchestrate all this.

When he finally asked the boxer how he felt, all he got was silence, and probably tears. You couldnt see, because the camera was covered by other bodies. But, inevitably, the Summer Olympics will have its very special moments. There have already been some: the sight of 76-year-old Sohn Kee Chung of South Korea carrying (he Olympic flame into the stadium; the touching moment when Arlene Limas of Chicago, winner of a gold medal in the martial-arts demonstration of taekwondo, led the crowd in spontaneous singing of The Star-Spangled Banner and the sound system failed during her award ceremony. Will the Soviets and Eastern Europe turn these games into considerably less than the 16 days of glory that the United States enjoyed in 1984? Stay tuned.

That, certainly, is what NBC is counting on. Independent Home Health Care. Inc 449-6888 WE CARE Independent Home Health offers: Skilled Nursing Physical Therapy Speech Therapy Occupational Theiapy Home Health Aides Homemakers Respite Care Durable Medical Equip 449-6888 Medicare and Medicaid Certified Locally Owned and Operated 1 4 iif i If Ik CLEMENSEN, Ruth age 69, of 241 Lincoln Road West. Services will be held Tues at Herrmann Co. Funeral Home.

Cremation interment in Sunset Memorial Gardens following service. Hagler-Anderson Mortuary "Locally Owned Operated" Bient Anderson Don Hagler Melvin Admire 650 Logan St. 442 8520 ROBERTS, Faye A. (Fazie), age 64, of 936 Prospect Ave. Vigil services will be held on Tuesday at 7 p.m.

at St. Marys Catholic Church. Mass of the Resurrection, 10 a m. from St. Mary's Catholic Church.

Cremation has taken Memorials may be send to Gods Love, 533 No. Main, or to Hospice of St. Peters Community Hospital, 2475 Broadway, Helena. MEHRING, Mabel age 80, of 509 So. Sanders.

Funeral arrangements are pending. ETZ rhmc'tal Home 315 East Sixth Ave Phone 442-1550 Ben Burgess TomTwicheU Tom Glodosky Ernest Retz Howard Retz' McNEES, Eileen age 51, of 1120 Vallejo. Wake services will be recited at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Retz Funeral Chapel. Mass of the Resurrection will be celebrated at IQ a m.

Wednesday in Our Lady of the Valley Church. Burial will be in Sunset Memorial Gardens. Those wishing may send contributions to Hospice of St. Peters or Our Lady of the Valley Church. Friends may pay their respects beginning Tues.

morning HANSON, Vernard age 73, 1011 11th Avenue. Memorial services will be conducted at 2 pm. Wednesday in the, Retz Funeral Chapel with Very Rev. Arch Hewitt officiating. Those wishing may send contributions to St.

Peters Hospital Foundation or St. Jude's Childrens Hospital, Memphis, Tn. career, Mrs. Roberts worked as a medical lab technician in Helena for Dr. Gallivan, Dr.

Cooney and Dr. Burgess and for St. Peters Hospital. Later, for a long period of time, sjie was employed by the state of Montana as chief, Montana Senate mail-room and senior clerk, Department of Revenue. For 16 years, she was headquarters office manager for the Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks, retiring in October of 1985.

Active in civic and community affairs, she was chairman of the Veterans Entertainment Committee in the American Legion Auxiliary, chairman of St. Peters Charity Ball, past president and charter member of the Helena Toastmistress Club, a leader in the Cub Scout and Girl Scouts and 4-H Club; and was active in the senior citizens clubs in Helena and Lincoln, Mont. She was active in the community of Lincoln, where she and her husband had a second home. She was a member of the Ponde-rosa Snow Warriors Club. Fishing, hiking, hunting, bowling, handicrafting and gourmet cooking were her favorite activities.

She was a member St. Marys Parish in Helena and St. Judes Parish in Lincoln. She was preceded in death by her son, John E. Roberts II in 1986.

Survivors include her husband of Helena; a daughter, Mrs. James (Dianne) Roberts Sanford of Renton, her mother, Ina McCall of Denver, and a brother, Tom Rivett of Lincoln, Neb. Cremation has taken place. Funeral services will be at St. Marys Catholic Church.

Vigil services will be at 7 p.m. Tuesday and Mass of the Resurrection will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday. The Rev. Edward Hislop will officiate.

Memorials may be sent to: Gods Love, 533 N. Main, Helena, 59601 or Hospice of St. Peters Community Hospital, 2475 Broadway, Helena, 59601. I I .1 I.

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