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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • 3

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tuesday. November 13. 1984 THE HERALD. Provo. Utah.

Page 3 3 Companies Want TV Station in Provo Dredge: Utah Lake Meeting i fk By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN Herald Staff Writer Three dillerent companies are vying for the right to operate a UHF television station in Provo. A preliminary hearing for the UHF permit is scheduled Nov. 28 in Washington DC. and a comparative hearing is scheduled some time after the first of the year, according to Ross Boyd, president of Morro Rock Resources. one of the applicants.

The station would be operated as Channel 16. If the Morro Rock Resources. Inc. application is approved, a location for the station will be found in Provo. Boyd said.

Bovd. who lives in Morro Bav, said his company is a Utah public corporation with 225 stockholders, most of them from Utah. Some stockholders are from California and some eastern states. "The company became a public corporation about 18 months ago." Boyd said. Fred Strauss, Porterville, is a corporation officer in addition to Boyd.

A third officer, John F. Quirk, recently resigned alter the governor of California appointed him to the Superior Court bench. Two other applicants are Skag-git Publishing Company of Seattle, and Sam Joseph Broadcasting Company of ISalt LakeCitv. (Continued From Page 1) the most cost-effective in the long run. Naylor said high water in Utah Lake has had an impact on state and county roads, the freeway, sewage treatment plants, boat harbors and marinas, productive farm land and residences.

"High ground water has affected land and homes three, four and five miles back from the lake shore." He told legislators that Utah Lake is expected to rise six feet above Compromise Level again this year, and high water in the lake will be a problem for several more years. "If the project is constructed in 1985, the lake can be lowered during the winter and over a period of three years can be brought down to Compromise." He noted that if the project was on place now. the lake could be stopped at 2.5 feet above Compromise next year. Naylor said costs can be trimmed by delaying start of construction until March, a move which would make a difference of only one inch in the level of Utah Lake. The lake will remain high this year because "the best time to drain Utah Lake is right now, and we don't have the benefit of this project," he said.

G. Marion Hinckley, a landowner near the lake, emphasized that material dredged from Jordan River "will be a plus for construction of the Jordan River Parkway, so money can be saved on that project." Naylor emphasized that the entire $10.7 project will raise the level of Great Salt Lake one inch. Veterans Day A Busy Time At Orem City (By Choice) Phil Shurtleff Photo Judge Verl Morgan rules on BYU quarterback Robbie Bosco's incarceration. Jail a Friend, Relative, Boss For Cancer Society Benefit Employees at most government agencies celebrated Veterans Day by taking Monday off. But, those at Orem City were hard at work.

Peggy D'Avignon, Personnel Div-ison manager, said employees are allowed the day after Thanksgiving and a "personal holiday," off, but are required to work Arbor Day in April and Veterans Day. The personal holiday allows employees to select a day of their choice and skip work that day. "I have never used it," said City Manager Daryl Berlin. "A lot of employees take it off on their birthday." He noted other cities also offer their employees personal holidays. Robbie Bosco was sentenced to "Win the Holiday Bowl" rather than pay the $250 bail, but others won't be so lucky.

The society hopes to raise $10,000 during the two day event. A joint arrest operation is being conducted in Salt Lake City. The function of the American Cancer Society is education according to Hal Williams, chairman of Utah County Board for the American Cancer Society. Robbie Bosco will go around to elementary schools tomorrow to pose for pictures and help increase awarness to the signs of cancer. Each person arrested must pose for a mug shot and then make a plea before the judge who will set a bail of $250.

The arrestee is then allowed to make as many phone calls in an hour as he can in order to raise the money from friends. "This way they can tell how politically popular they are," joked Myrna Singleton, director of the American Cancer Society in Utah County. Bosco said he agreed to the arrest as part of a project for a public relations class he is taking at BYU. Because of certain stipulations imposed by the NCAA, By CHERYL KARR Herald Staff Writer Arrested for wearing red, Brigham Young football quaterback Robbie Bosco pleadedguilty before the judge the judge for the American Cancer Society that is. Approximately 150 mock war-rents have been signed in an effort to raise money for the American Cancer Society.

Charlie Bates, the owner of Valtek, will be arrested tonight and the mayors of Provo and Orem will have that privilege tomorrow along with several other prominent citizens in the valley. AJ1. PEMBROKE CO. Invites You To Attend The THEFT: Describing Criminals Chamber Secretaries Relieved At Administrative Appointment NOVEMBER 15TH 16T1 PROVO EXCELSIOR ALPINE MOM 9 AM 5 PM if I mm i it 1 I I II' "A big vacation," Lorton adds. The Gillespie-Lorton Administration might become best remembered for organizing the Energiz-ers.

Chamber President Dave Taylor had wanted a group to help keep existing members in the chamber. In September, Gillesie and Lorton took the charge and organized the Energizers to visit new and existing businesses, showing an interest and encouraging membership in the chamber. And, 34 new members joined the chamber during the brief Gillespie-Lorton Administration. "When Julie and I took over Connie's job, I did'nt feel like we had that much more of a load, it was just I never realized how much responsibility Connie had," Gillespie says. By J.J.

JACKSON Herald Staff Writer Shauna Gillespie and Julie Lor-ton are thankful someone has been hired to replace them. Gillespie is executive assistant at the Or Chamber of Commerce and Lorton is executive secretary. For the past three months, the pair has filled the role of the executive vice president. When Connie Barker resigned, they were asked to pick up the slack until the chamber could select a new executive vice president. They did.

They directed a membership drive, planned a communications seminar, helped head the Sub-for-Santa program; organized the "En-ergizers," went to ribbon-cuttings, pulled off a meet-the-candidates forum and started preparing bal- 3M Meeting graphics, visuals IBM typewriters (including new wheel quiet writers) Julie Lorton Shauna Gillespie 3M automated duplicator systems 3M copiers lots for the upcoming election of new chamber officers. Oh, they also kept the financial records up to date. Gillespie heaves a sigh of relief when asked if the hiring of Vernon D. Saunders as the new executive vice president will be a vacation of sorts. Refreshments Served mm FOR SALE BY OWNER UTAH Mill AIIO WOMEN ARE LOSING WEIGHT WHILE EATING GOURMET MEALS! f' fK lis 1415 East 140 South Pleasant Grove CONTACT LEON EL CASTILLO OR SUSAN PAWLOWSKI (Continued From Page 1) were Orem residents, four were from Provo, and others came from American Fork, Springville, Ma-pleton, Spanish Fork, Moroni and Heber City.

Retail theft is a misdemeanor if the stolen goods are worth less than $250, but offenders can face a felony charge for stealing a candy bar if they have a previous shoplifting record, Olsen noted. A theft of goods valued $100 or less is a Class misdemeanor with a penalty of six months in jail and $299 fine." Most shoplifting falls in that category. Stealing goods valued from is a Class A misdemeanor with a penalty of up to one year in jail and up to $1,000 fine. Shoplifters who haul off merchandise worth are felons. Prison could be the penalty.

"We have had several felony cases here in the last year, where somebody goes on a shoplifting spree. They lift a TV or VCR, and usually when we catch up with them," they've hit several stores," Olsen said. The places where shoplifters ended up arrested the most in October were the University Mall, Grand Central and Skaggs in Orem. Other stores that handed over thieves were 7-11, K-Mart, Mr. G's, Gibson's, Macey's and Wolfe's.

"Shoplifting has always been a problem the way some stores are run," Detective Olsen said. "Grand Central and Skaggs have a security force that just works shoplifts, but it's a very difficult thing to get on to. Large stores are easier than a small store (to shoplift). They're the ones that have the worst problems." Olsen said the police department occasionally offers classes on retail theft to teach employees what to watch for. But generally, sales clerks are oriented to sales and not to confrontations and arrests, he said.

Cassette tapes and albums are favored items among juvenile shoplifters. Candy is commonly lifted by youngsters and adults. Other items lifted in October included a computer game cartridge, cosmetics, jewelry, toys, underwear, perfume and aftershave cologne, ammunition, a telephone, masking tape and freezer tape, a bottle of chloraseptic, socks, gloves, boots, shoes, eyeglasses, a shirt, hand warmer fluid, a prescription, chewing tobacco, cigarettes, a BMX bike seat clamp, fake fingernails, sewing notions, bicycle handlebar grips, pocket mirrors, tap washers and a faucet acetator. magazines, a child's board game, and Halloween makeup and masks. Most often, shoplifters put the goods in their coat pockets, purses, or down the front of their pants.

Sometimes they put things in a sack with items from a different store. One couple worked a store together, concealing toys and other items in a baby's blanket in the baby carrier. Several of October's incidents resulted from a dare. 2400 square feet with an unfinished basement. 2Vi-' baths.

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Years Available:
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