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Reno Gazette-Journal from Reno, Nevada • Page 14

Location:
Reno, Nevada
Issue Date:
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14
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6C RENO TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 2006 RGJ.com On today available the and Web: past online at issues Obituaries rgj.com are from Paid To place an Obituary or Card of Thanks: Obituaries Call (775) 788-6240 or (775) 348-7355 Advertisement from 8 am 5 pm weekdays Dewey J. Jack Ben Ruby Ruth May REDDING CARAMELLA CUNNYNGHAM REINHARDT Dewey J. Redding, 81, passed away on Tuesday, February 28, 2006. Dewey was a WWII veteran serving in the US Army. He was a truck driver both independently, and finally retiring from Helms Construction.

He loved being on the road and had many stories to tell of his travels. His home was in Nebraska until moving to Nevada in 1962. He was an accomplished guitar player and singer and entertained friends and family for many years. He also played in local clubs in the 60's and 70's and was enjoyed by all. After his retirement, he stayed busy by working on vehicles for himself and his friends, a hobby he thoroughly enjoyed.

He is survived by Millie Peterson, longtime companion, sons, Randy, Marty and Jeff Redding, daugters, Julie Seekins, Jennifer Desmond, nine grandchildren and five great grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his daughter, Jackie. A Memorial Service will be held on Friday, March 10 at 1:00 p.m. at the Mountain View Mortuary, 425 Stoker Ave. IN LOVING MEMORY Sandra S.

Crump She is survived by her son, Richard Maxwell and daughterin-law, Barbara Maxwell, sister, Karen House and her husband, Kenneth Crump. IN REMEMBRANCE OF SHIRLEY RICHARDS Sierra Shadows Mobile Home Community Office will be closed on Wednesday, March 8, 2006. Monte Ray "Doc" DOKKEN Monte Ray "Doc" Dokken was born in Mobridge, South Dakota July 14, 1947, he passed away March 4, 2006. His father, Myrel, of Mobridge, preceded him in death. One daughter, Dawn Renee Ball and her husband Stan of San Antonio, Texas, mother Shirley Dokken of Mobridge, South Dakota, brother Steve Dokken and wife Rochelle of Pierre, South Dakota, a nephew and a niece, survive Monte.

Monte was a Vietnam era veteran. He was employed for many years by Harrah's casino where he dealt, taught crap school, and was a pit supervisor. In recent years CalNeva at Boomtown Casino employed him in the Sports book. Monte was named employee of the month this last February. He was an avid sports fan with uncommon and unwavering devotion to the New York Yankees.

Monte was a loving father, son, brother, and friend, with a kind heart and a ready laugh. His family and many friends will miss him. Burial will be in Mobridge, South Dakota. There will be a memorial service in Reno at a later date. Jack Ben Caramella, 69, a 3rd generation resident of Reno, NV, passed away on March 4, 2006.

He was born August 8, 1936 to Ben and Cecile Caramella. After graduating from Bishop Manogue High School in 1954, he served in the Nevada Air National Guard. In 1955, he married his first wife, Carol Ratto from Oakland, CA They started Capital Sanitation in 1958 then expanded their business into the area, partnering with his father, Ben, brother, Sam and sister, Joanne and her husband, Julius. He was preceded in death by his brother, Sam Caramella. He is survived by his mother and sister, Joanne Ballardini (Julius), daughters, Laree Caramella (Bill), Jennifer Traniello (Marco), Jacie Caramella, Julie Miller (Scott) and previous wife, Sheila Caramella, grandchildren, Aunna Lesha, Nicholas, Bryce and Samantha, and many nieces, many great nieces and nephews, and his loving companion, Diane Huggins.

A Rosary is scheduled for Tuesday, March 7, 2006 at 7:00 p.m. at St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church with a Memorial Mass on Wednesday, March 8, 2006 at 1:00 p.m. also at St. Rose of Lima.

In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to: Our Lady of Mercy, 4619 Byron Circle, Irving, TX 75038. Ralph E. LAYMAN Ralph E. Layman, age 68, died Friday, March 3, 2006 at 5:05 p.m. at Defiance Regional Medical Center where he had been a patient for one day.

He was born in Defiance, Ohio on September 22, 1937, the of Virgil and Wava (Driver) Layman. He was a truck driver Bekins Van Lines of Hillsdale, Illinois for 15 years, retiring in 1981. He was a member of the Teamsters Drivers Union and the National Rifle Association. He is survived by his sons, Brian E. Layman of Marysville, WA, and Matt (Amy) Layman of Reno, NV, daughter, Tami (Joel) Sevilla Layman of Reno, NV, three brothers, John (Gwen) Layman of Defiance, OH, Paul (Lila Mae) Layman of Lindale, GA, and Floyd (Janis) Layman of Ney, OH, and seven grandchildren.

He is preceded in death by his parents, a daughter, Laura Layman, and a brother, David Layman. Funeral Services will be conducted 8:00 p.m. Tuesday, March 7 at the Den Herder Funeral Home, Paulding, OH. Burial will be in Live Oak Cemetery, Paulding, OH at a ater date. Calling at the Den Herder Funeral Home on Tuesday, March 7 from 4-8 p.m.

Memorials to: Paulding Area Visiting Nurses and Hospice. greatest of these is love." 1st Corinthians 13:13 Dorothy J. Geil, 85, passed into eternity on March 2, 2006. She was born in Oakland, CA on December 11, 1920, the second of three children born to Dr. and Mrs.

Clifford W. Mack. She graduated from Livermore Elementary and High Schools and attended Mills College in Oakland, CA. She married John W. Simon of Livermore, CA and was the wonderful mother of four children.

She was a past member of P.E.O. and Our Savior's Lutheran Church, and a discussion leader in Bible Study Fellowship in Livermore. Dorothy married James Sheldon Geil of Glendale, CA in 1987 and lived in Silverton, OR until she suffered a stroke in 1993 at the age of 73. She has lived in the loving care of Mita and Ferdie Guina in their own Mother's Loving Care Home for ten years in Reno, NV. During this time, Dorothy has graduated from the Senior Bridges Program at Washoe Medical Center and attended The Meeting Place and The Continium in Sparks and Reno.

Dorothy is the beloved mother of Margery Atkinson of San Jose, CA, Carol Ford (Tim) of Elko, NV, Mary Ludwig of Livermore, CA and Tom Simon (Gail) of Reno, NV; grandmother of Jeanne Schow (Rick) of Morgan Hill, CA, Diane Elner (Stew) of Sparks, NV. Dirk Walker of San Jose, CA, Cynthia Rowe (Sean) of Reno, NV, Renae Ludwig and Kyle Ludwig of Livermore, CA; stepgrandmother of Heather Morris Stagl, Streamwood, IL and Paul Morris of Reno, NV, great-grandmother of Kristy and Brenden Schow of Morgan Hill, CA, and Nathaniel Martinez of Livermore, CA; sister of William Clifford Mack of Los Angeles, CA, sister of Elizabeth Finigan of Cambria, CA who predeceased her, and aunt of George Finigan of Paso Robles, CA. She leaves loving extended families and the very special people who loved and cared for her. A Service will be held on Wednesday, March 8, 2006 at 1:00 p.m. at the First Congregational Church, 627 Sunnyside Dr.

in Reno. Pastor Wayne Hoag of Sierra Bible Church in Truckee will Officiate. A gravesite service will be held on Friday, March 10, 2006 at 1:00 p.m. i in Memory Gardens on East Ave. in Livermore, CA.

Paster Marc Calcagno of Cornerstone Fellowship in Livermore will officiate. "And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the Ruby Cunnyngham, 92, passed away on Feb. 27, 2006 at home in Carson City, NV. She was born on September 10, 1913 in Marksville, Louisiana to Jerome Gauthier and Angelic Bordeleon.

She was a resident of Nevada since 1971, living Fallon and Reno before moving to Carson City in 1981. Ruby is a member of St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church in Carson City. She was preceded in death by her Cunnyngham and a granddaughter. She is survived by her daughter, Geraldine Cunnyngham of Carson City, granddaughter, Kelley Higgins and husband Sean, grandson, Casey and daughter-in-law, Geneie Cunnyngham all of Sparks, NV.

Funeral Mass will be held at St. Teresa of Avila Catholic Church (North Chapel) in Carson City on Tuesday March 7, 2006 at 10:30 a.m., viewing will also be held prior to the Mass in the north chapel from 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. Burial will follow at the Churchill County Cemetery in at Ruth May Reinhardt, 80, of Reno, passed away March 3, 2006. She was born June 17, 1925 in Mansfield, Ohio, the daughter of Carl and Katherine (Hock) Blumenschein. She married Ray Reinhardt, Jr.

of Ohio on August 24, 1946 in Mansfield, OH. She moved to Reno, NV in 1949 and settled in Carson City, NV in 1950, where she lived until She returned to Reno in 1968. and later lived in Zephyr Cove and Albuquerque, NM before returning to Carson City in 1993. Ruth was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Carson City, a homemaker, a Study Hall Teacher at Carson City Jr. High School, a member of PEO Sisterhood for 53 years, Carson City Leisure Hour Club, and SAE Mother's Club.

She is survived by four sons; Jim (Karen) Reinhardt, Jacks Valley, NV, Jack (Adrienne) Reinhardt, Carson City, Jerry (Allison) Reinhardt, Perth, seven grandchildren; Josh Reinhardt and Kevin Rohrbough, Reno, Guyan and Courtney Long, Las Vegas, NV, Nick and Aaron Reinhardt, Carson City and Winston and Keaton Reinhardt, Perth, Australia, and one great granddaughter, Alexis Long. A Memorial Service will be held on Thursday, March 9, 2006 at 2:00 pm at the Carson City 1st Presbyterian Church, 306 W. Musser Street, Carson City. Memorial Contributions are suggested to the church or PEO Sisterhood, Chapter N. Arrangements are under the direction of Walton Funeral Home in Reno.

BOHMONT, PhD. BOHMONT, PhD. notable progress in both the research and cooperative extension areas. Dale loved agriculture and all that came from it, especially 4- and FFA. He would spend many hours traveling the state visiting with farmers, ranchers, and their youth, promoting the college.

His career took him from the Plant Science Department at the University of Wyoming, where he was the head of the department, to the Associate Director of the Agriculture Experiment Station at Colorado State University. In April of 2005, Bohmont was presented the "Lifetime Achievement Award" by the College of Agriculture, Biotechnology and Natural Resources, University of Nevada, Reno. It honored his 42 years dedicated to Nevada agriculture as Dean of the college and later as a long term supporter of the industry. During the 1968-69 school years, he took a leave of absence from UNR as a consultant with the Resource Development Corporation, as an agricultural consultant, especially in the areas of arid lands agriculture in Turkey, Iran and Australia. He passed on modern agriculture technology, enabling these countries to improve their food production.

Dale was also a very active member of the Lions Club of Reno, where he was known as their "roar He received their Lion of the Year award in 1994, and was Past President of that organization. He also was a member of Alpha Zeta, Phi Kappa Phi, Alpha Tau, Alpha Gamma, Sigma Delta, Farm House Fraternity, Experiment Station Director's Association, Western Coop Society, American Society of Agronomists, and American Association for Advancement of Science. He served on the Nevada Agriculture Foundation, which he created, and on many other boards and organizations in the state. Dale's book "The Golden Age of Agriculture" is still in print. Dale grew up in Wheatland, Wyoming, where he and his lovely sister, Mildred, of Reno, lived on their family ranch.

He attended local schools there. He was a member of the US Air Force during World War II. He attended the University of Wyoming, receiving a BS degree in 1948, and his Masters in 1950. PhD was earned at the University of Nebraska in 1952, and his M.P.A. at Harvard followed in 1959.

Dale is survived by his sons; Dennis, of Mission, South Dakota, Craig, of San Francisco, and his sister Mildred, of Reno. His wife, Marilyn Horn Bohmont, passed away in 2005. His infectious smile, laugh, wit, and charm will be missed by all. Funeral Services will be held at 11:00 am on Wednesday, March 8, 2006 at the Reno First United Methodist Church, 209 West 1st Street. Interment will be held at Mountain View Cemetery.

In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions are suggested to the University of Nevada Foundation, Reno, NV 89557-004 DW Bohmont Agriculture Leadership Foundation Scholarship, Jean Carbon. Arrangements are under the direction of Walton Funeral Home in Former Dean of the College of Agriculture at the University of Nevada, Dale W. Bohmont, died March 5, 2006 at his home in Reno. He was born June 7, 1922 in Wheatland, Wyoming to John Wendell and Mary (Armonn) Bohmont. Dale came to Reno in 1963.

His goal was to convince Nevada ranchers and farmers that the College of Agriculture was a part of their agricultural family. He served as Dean from 1963 1982. During his tenure, he witnessed a tremendous increase in the college, where they also made How To PUBLISH AN OBITUARY Fax your notice to: (775) 788-6436 Call: (775) 788-6240 Email your notice to: When you submit, please provide us with: Your Name, Address, Phone Number and the name of the funeral home or cremation society. Omission of any of the above may delay publication. Mail your notice to: Obituary Specialist Reno Gazette-Journal PO Box 22000 Reno, NV 89520 (Notices must by clearly printed or typed) You will find an easy to use obituary form at: www.rgj.com/obits Deadlines for Publication: Tuesday through Saturday publications: 2:00 p.m.

the day before, Sunday Monday publications: Friday at 3:00 p.m. Moussaoui could have prevented prosecutors say BY MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN ZACARIAS ASSOCIATED PRESS MOUSSAOUI: The 37-year-old faces either execution or ALEXANDRIA, Va. life in prison. Opening its argument for executing 1-Qaida conspirator Zacarias Moussaoui, the gov- AP FILE ernment said Monday he "lied so that murders could follow" on Sept.

11, 2001. al-Qaida recruiting poster is by But the defense portrayed your verdict," MacMahon told Moussaoui as a buffoon isolated jurors. "Please don't make him a even by al-Qaida and urged ju- hero. He doesn't deserve it." rors to deny him the martyrdom The 37-year-old Frenchman of a death sentence. of Moroccan descent, who faces In a heavily guarded court- either execution or life in prison house just miles from the Pen- without release, stroked his tagon, where some of the 2,972 beard and intently studied the victims of Sept.

11 died, pros- faces of jurors and the audience ecutor Rob Spencer opened during opening statements. his case by telling the jury that "even though he was in jail on Jury box Sept. 11, he did his part as a loyal al-Qaida soldier." Empaneled hours earlier, 10 "Had he not lied to agents men and seven women listened in 2001, the U.S. government from the jury box. Across the would have stopped those hall, watching on closed circuit deaths, or at least some of them," TV, Moussaoui's mother, Aicha, Spencer asserted.

wept quietly when he entered Court-appointed defense at- court. torney Edward MacMahon One floor above, families scoffed at that idea. He termed of the Sept. 11 victims also Moussaoui's dreams of being a watched on TV. Outside, snipterrorist "sound and fury signify- ers clad in black fatigues guarded ing nothing." the building.

Wearing a green prison 'Cuckoo in the head' jumpsuit and a white knit cap, Moussaoui remained quiet durConsidered a headache and ing proceedings, but as he left even called "cuckoo in the head" for a recess he told the lawyers, by one al-Qaida leader, Mouss- "All your stories, all your Ameraoui "was intentionally isolated ican creations have nothing to from the real hijackers in the do with me." United States," MacMahon ar- Prosecutor Spencer said gued. "Nothing Moussaoui did Moussaoui, the only mancharged or said even al lie caused in this country in the Sept. 11 anyone to die that day." plot, should be held responsible Now Moussaoui yearns for for not stopping it after the FBI martyrdom, MacMahon as- arrested him Aug. 16, 2001, serted. "The only way he can.

while he was training in Eagan, appear as a smiling face on an to fly jetliners. Dale W. Exercise might help patients who have Parkinson's disease enrollment in enrollment in BY LAURAN NEERGAARD ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON Heather Mac Tavish leaped around the circle of drums, singing and waving her arms to urge the drummers louder, faster. Only a slight tremor in one hand revealed her Parkinson's disease. That and the name-tags on her drummers a mix of Parkinson's patients and brain researchers, watching MacTavish kick up her orange-socked heels in the name of science.

Growing evidence suggests that exercise whether it's sweating on a treadmill or on a dance floor can help Parkinson's patients move better and might even slow the inevitable march of this degenerative brain disease. "Even if we can't reverse things, I think we still hope that we can slow down or even stop the progression," says Michael Zigmond, a neurobiologist at the University of Pittsburgh who, with colleagues in Texas, has come up with some of the most tantalizing research. If nothing else, "we have to keep our bodies in shape for the next therapy" to be discovered, adds Dr. David Heydrick, a Maryland neurologist who also has Parkinson's disease and puts in an hour on the treadmill every day. The notion is gaining such ground that when the National Institutes of Health organized an international meeting of Parkinson's researchers last month, patients, dance instructors and personal trainers were invited to tell and demonstrate the benefits they believe come from physical activity of all kinds.

Parkinson's disease gradually destroys brain cells called neurons that produce dopamine, a chemical crucial for the cellular signaling that controls muscle movement. Dorothy GEIL Researchers identify hot spots for potential species extinction WASHINGTON (AP) From frigid northern Canada and Alaska to tropical Asian islands, lands where wildlife seems safe today might pose some of the greatest extinction dangers in the future. In particular peril are animals with a relatively small geographic range and those that have a large body mass and reproduce slowly. Researchers identified regions where they felt there was a high "latent extinction risk" for nonmarine mammals, often areas that have had little human impact so far. Latent risk is low in parts of the world already heavily populated by people, where species likely to succumb to the pressure have already done so.

The findings are reported in Monday's online edition of Pro- ceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "Latent risk can be thought of as a measure of the potential for a species to decline rapidly toward extinction given exposure to levels of human impact" that have been felt elsewhere, said the team led by Marcel Cardillo of Imperial College in London. The area with the most potentially endangered species, 284, is Sumatra and peninsular Malaysia, the report said. Next, with 224 species, is Borneo, followed by New Guinea, 205 species, western Java, 131 species and Sulawesi, 130 species. Other areas of high threat are Maluku, Indonesia, 99 species; Northern Canada and Alaska, 96 species; Melanesian Islands, 96 species; Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia, 86 species; and East Indian highlands, 70 species.

Bill Pearce Courtesy Come and see me for all your auto sales leasing needs. 0000132152 Andre Ribeiro 780 Kietzke Lane Reno, NV 89502 775-789-7999 1.

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