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Show iJanuary 30, 1991 - The Springville Herald - Page Twenty-three, Section 2 Delinquent Name Listing Greenbelt Rollback Accounts Delinquent Name Listing by District Lake Shore & Benjamin Drainage District NAME v SERIAL NO. ' AMOUNT YEAR Gria Anderson K 107 5.00 1990 Steve Carter K 115 A 5.00 1990 Ronald Elklns K 794 A , 7.50 1990 Wendell Hansen K 813 27.05 1990 David Heaton k'648 A 5.00 1990 Maryan J.B. Bramall K 157 B 5.00 1990 John Llnstrom K 123 8.51 1990 Mark Llttlef leld K 640 A 5.00 1990 Eddie Lee K 813 A A 5.00 - 1990 Michael Mellor K 788 A 5.00 ' 1990 Donald Proctor K 156 & K 155 25.50 1990 Sherll Provstgaard K 734 5.00 1990 M. Scott Roberts K 754 & K 752 A 33.00 . 1990 Marjorie Shepherd K 521 5.00 1990 Steven J. Stone K 748 B 46.72 1990 David Taylor K 750 1 5.00 , 1990 Frank R. Zink K 131 7.32 1990 Previous Total Balance Amt . Du Kieth Argyle K306-Al acre 0.00 13.00 Charles Elwood Conrad K247.68 acres 0.00 12.04 Carl Edward Creer J1816-Bl acre J1816-C.69 acres TOTAL ACRES1.69 0.00 15.07 David L. Davis K203-1AA3 . 09 acres 0.00 19.27 Douglas Downey K224-Bl acre 0.00 13.00 Equitable Life and Casualty K44013.20 acres 0.00 49.60 Jerry Ferre K218-AA1.36 acres 0.00 14.08 Don J. Finlayson K262-A2.14 acres K203-l1.31 acres TOTAL ACRES3.45 20.35 40.70 Allen H. Gait K20413.04 acres K2607.93 acres K2575.12 acres TOTAL ACRES26.09 0.00 88.27 Steve Gardner K120A1 acre 13.00 26.00 Marcel Graham K34333.11 acres K9255.66 acres . TOTAL ACRES88.77 0.00 276.31 Jerry D. Grover K35820 acres 0.00 70.00 Brent D.Kent B. Hansen K26319.73 acres 0.00 69.19 Michael E. Hansen K247-A.45 acres 0.00 11.35 Don Hatch K220.91 acres 0.00 12.73 Robert Hatch K251B.58 acres K251A.12 acres TOTAL ACRES.70 12.10 24.20 Lee N. Jensen K97A.69 acres 12.07 24.14 Don P. Judy K3211.64 acres 0.00 14.92 Jack D. Larsen K265l acre K26430.13 acres K264A.5 acres, ,..,, ...,.,, . K27045.31 acres ), TOTAL ACRES76.94 264.90 505.72 Shirl, David, Jack Larsen J1806C6.06 acres J180712.5 acres J18184.93 acres J18194.93 acres TOTAL ACRES28.42 408.39 503.65 John Lewis K429A25.35 acres K44A-B18.77 acres TOTAL ACRES44.12 Kent Mckell John Mendelkaw K238. 25 acres K239.14 acres TOTAL ACRES.39 Lyman L. Peterson J18011.03 acres Douglas H. Provstgaard K222l acre Frank J. Scott K4329 acres Thomas R. Shepherd K203-1-Al . 33 acres Hal Sterling Shuler K346AA27.18 acres David L. Simons K310A1 acre Alice Steele K316A1.43 acres Rex L. Steele K3131.3 acres Harold J. Thomas J1725A8.92 acres Doratha Willis K356B5.78 acres Hyrum Wilson K3621.76 acres Blaine Wride K355A1 acre Delinquent Name Listing by District Utah County Drainage District No. 1 NAME E. Dean Brian Clyde Johnson Verl D. Davies Clark E. Fullmer Lynn R. Hales Keith P. Snelson Ivan B. Henserson Gordon E. Mills Larry G. Lay ton Arthur D. Johnson Classes at Classes offered on an ongoing on-going basis at Mt. View Hospital Hospi-tal in Payson are listed below: Overeaters Anonymous -Meets every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Physical Therapy Lobby. Low Impact Aerobics For Seniors - Taught on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 1 1 a.m. Class fee: $1 Physical Therapy area. High Energy Aerobics - SERIAL NO. AMOUNT YEAR I 545 8 16 B & I 545 8 16 B A 25.00 1990 I 545 8 26 A A 17.50 1990 I 545 8 56 23.73 1990 I 570 1, I 574 & H 1065 A 39.72 1990 H 593 & I 545 8 21 20.90 1990 I 545 8 29 & I 545 8 30 26.88 1990 I 545 8 10 C A 17.50 1990 I 545 8 10 C 30.12 1990 I 545 8 16 C 17.50 1990 I 1337 A 17.50 1990 fllf. View Taught on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 4:30 p.m. Started on Jan. 3. Class fee: $1.50. Taught by certified instructor, Judy Daniels. Alanon - Meets every Wednesday Wed-nesday at 8 p.m. Narcotics Anonymous -Meets every Thursdsay at 8 p.m. Alcoholics Anonymous - Meets every Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Community Classroom. 284.72 11.18 13.09 0.00 0.00 13., 9 9 413M8 13.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 15.28 0.00 22.35 26.18 13.00 97.00 27.98 504.72 26.00 14.29 13.90 36.76 27.34 30.56 13.00 Family Support Group -Meets on Mondays at 7 p.m. to discuss family dynamics and problems. Designed for former patients and their families. Physician Referral - Need a doctor? Mt. View Hospital provides a free physician referral service by calling 465-9201 465-9201 ext. 113 or 190. Immunization Clinic - The Utah County Health Dept. conducts immunization clinics on Wednesdays at the Community Commu-nity Classroom. Please contact the health department for an appointment at 379-8728. 142.36 OWNER NAME SERIAL ACCOUNT AMOUNT DELINQUENT Cheraple Farms 17; 008; 0006 117 $3,810.55 Ross C Burgess 11;054;0089 221 $ 209.48 Brian C Johnson 59;130;0008 224 $ 8.20 Carolyn L Cooper 12:009:0024 233 $2,725.96 Henriksen Family 14: 074; 0046 234 $ 725.81 Enterprises Carlos B Watkins 11;054;0049 235 $ 345.83 Lee Ell Corp 13;003;0021 238 $ 10.00 Snell Olsen 27: 032; 0004 239 $1,196.28 Crandall Farms Inc , 26:028:0013 240 $ 224.23 L James Ottesen 27:033:0059 243 $ 113.83 Sterling Hal Shuler 30:078:0003 244 $ 172.11 Theron C Huff 24:019;0002 250 $ 44.45 Ronald L Carson 13:030:0009 253 $ 329.96 J Lee Butler 27:039:0061 255 $ 169.28 John Perry Larsen 25:029:0002 259 $1,481.24 Rex B Blake 18: 027; 0006 260 $ 159.02 Jack Clark Sumner 17; 012: 0039 261 $ 104.14 Valley Asphalt Inc 27:056:0020 264 $3,042.45 Suburban Land Corp 30:078:0017 268 $ 273.76 Suburban Land Corp 30:078:0090 269 $ 13.86 Relief Mine Co 29:051:0060 272 $2,023.47 Craig P Yuzon 14:056:0042 284 $ 165.85 Iris C Orton 26:072:0005 288 $2,558.67 Melvin E Salisbury 28:017:0021 289 $ 165.70 Noy L Christofferson 12:031:0001 291 $1,575.90 Charles R Radcliff 59: 140; 0005 292 $1,098.61 Melvyn L Cook 17:010:0005 297 $1,038.64 When freedom is Remarks , by General L. . Layton Collins, U.S. Army Commander of the VII Crops, American Army. Written for the 20th Commemoration Com-memoration of D-Day, this is displayed in the museum at Utah Beach on the Normandy Coast. War is the ultimate human tragedy. After each major war there is an inevitable reaction against war's vast waste of man's material and spiritual resources. Poets, dramatists, news commentators, and political polit-ical leaders join in universal condemnation of war. This is natural and salutary. It would be more salutary if this condemnation con-demnation were lasting and effective ef-fective in preventing further wars. It might also be more effective ef-fective if the molders of public thought, particularly the intellectuals, intel-lectuals, were to direct their rightful criticism of war and all its ways, against the real perpetrators, the aggressors, whether they be Nazis or militant mili-tant Communists, who seek by force of arms to extend their territories or impose their ideologies ide-ologies on others. Too often, our condemnation condemna-tion of war tends to emphasize its apparent futility. The "conscientious "con-scientious objector" first of all refuses to fight in defense of his freedom and after the war is won and his liberty secured, claims that nothing has been achieved, that the soldiers' sacrifices were all in vain. Much as I hate war, I refuse to believe that the men who died all those years ago on these beaches and in the boc-age boc-age country beyond, did so in vain. I am sure that the people of Normandy do not believe this, nor will they forget these men. True, before we came in June of 1944, this lovely countryside coun-tryside lay peaceful and relatively rela-tively untouched by the war. Cattle grazed placidly, the orchards wore their mantles of blossoms in quiet beauty, and farmers stolidly plowed their fields as their fathers did before be-fore them. But beneath this outward show of complacency, these freedom-loving Normans seethed inwardly under the yoke of Nazi occupation. They longed for freedom, biding their time till help could come from overseas. And we Americans Ameri-cans knew, as did our like-thinking like-thinking British and Canadian challenged alliesthat their freedom and ours was interlinked. Unless they, and all of France were freed, we ourselves could not long remain free. So, the people of Normandy stoically accepted the seemingly-senseless bombing of their towns, the inescapable slaughter slaugh-ter of their fine cattle by artillery artil-lery fire, the churning-up of freshly-plant ed fields by tanks and skirmishing paratroopers, helped destroy enemy communications commu-nications and eagerly gave information to our soldiers--and they also helped to locate and bury our dead. Did these men die in vain? Was all the toil and sacrifice of our soldiers and sailors and airmen in this greatest of all amphibious operations futile and to no avail? We have our answers today as we see lovely Normandy, with the scars of war removed, and in fact, all of La Belle, France, once again strong, confident and at peace with a Germany that we hope has renounced for all time the trappings of Prussian and Nazi aggression. I happened to have been born in the, City of New Orleans Or-leans in the American state of Louisiana, largely settled and developed by emigrants from France and Ffrench Canada. Though I am not of French descent, I felt as if I were renewing re-newing the ties of boyhood as I waded ashore on Utah Beach. But beyond such emotional ties, Americans and Frenchmen French-men have deeper bonds in common: an innate love of liberty, an abiding respect for the dignity of man and a passionate pas-sionate determination to defend de-fend our individual rights and freedom. Passing circumstances may at times obscure these bonds, but surely we can be confident that t he deep - rooted f r ie ndsh i p of our two peoples, nurtured by the gallant deeds of such men as General LaFayette and Admiral DeGrasse in the American Am-erican Revolution, and General Pershing in World War I and bound together again on the beaches of Normandy, will flourish anew, whenever and wherever freedom is challenged. challen-ged. People once mistakenly believed eating carrots would aid asthma. Court taxes computer output The Utah Supreme Court has found that "computer generated gen-erated output," including mailing mail-ing lists on either printed sheets of paper or magnetic tapes, are tangible personal property subject to sales or use taxation. The ruling throws cold water on plans by a coalition coali-tion of taxpayers to launch a legal challenge to the sales tax on computer programs. In the Haroldsen vs. State Tax Commission decision, the court said "A Picasso painting is personal property, but its value is hardly the value of the canvas, the frame, and the , paint." The Utah court appears to align itself with a minority of states holding that "canned'' computer programs are tangible tangi-ble personal property subject to sales taxation. The court seemed to leave the door open for non-taxability of computer software if the medium of transfer is intangible. intangi-ble. For example, software transmitted over telephone lines, without ever assuming a tangible form would not be taxable, while the same software soft-ware purchased on a magnetic disk would be subject to taxation. taxa-tion. Resident sought The U.S. Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 2 (Sea Bees) served at the U.S. Naval Air Station Atsugi, Japan and Cubi Point in the Philippine Islands during the Korean conflict. One of our former members mem-bers had a last known address ad-dress of Springville, Utah. This person's name is Kenneth Ken-neth H. Butler, and we would very much like to contact him to inform him of our plans to have a reunion in the near future. Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Mr. Butler is asked to call collect, or write to this address: Stoney Serrett, Reunion Committee, 9756 Mesa Verde Ave., Baton Rouge, LA 70814, 504-927-7208. The first automobile show was held in New York City in 1900. |