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Show Wednesday, November DAILY HERALD 12 ... TAH VfflEY f1 Yii'' X- Daily Digest - Sirens to sound across Provo on Thursday This year the sirens will also serve as Loud feasant tX Mountak.V.x Saratoga - . t r.ioiU3 ... Get the full story and other news of local interest in your community newspaper. LeN Free Press iisak. 1. Eagie sirens will sound in Provo on Thursday but don't panic. all part of an annual test to make certain the sirens, which are located in Provo's Riverbottoms area and at the Provo City Center, are in working order. Thursday they will sound for a full minute and should be heard across much of Provo. The only other times the sirens would sound, ' with an accompanying message, would be during an emergency. I 1 2004 ' ' - Cathy Allred 756-766-9 V. Vf , Pleasant Grove Review Pony Express U" Grove Lehi, Cedar Valley, Saratoga Springs, Lindon Pleasant Grove or 1 American Fork Citizen Lone Peak Press a re- minder to Provo residents of emergency preparation activities that are taking place, according to Mayor Lewis K. Billings. At 7 p.m. a program titled "Disaster Preparedness in Provo" will air on Cable Channel 17 and will be simulcast on Radio Station KEYY, 1450 AM. "Our goal is ta make certain that individuals and families in Provo watch this program and then review and update their own emergency preparation plan," Billings said. Barbara Christiansen 756-7669 American Fork, Highland, Alpine - Hills Orem Geneva Times ' Sj orCedar Utah ;J rlfcT'le lake v" Landon Olson 225-134-0 ' Orem, vineyard Spanish Fork Press Steve Hardman 798-101- 1 COUNTYWIDE I The Utah County Art Gallery, 151 S. University Ave., Provo, will be displaying the art of Kent Rich on Thursday through Nov. 26. The gallery is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. A reception for the artist has been scheduled for Nov. 14 from 4 to 6 p.m. at the gallery. The exhibit is free. ALPINE I A fund has been set up for those who wish to donate to Clark the family of Ator who was killed in a plane crash in Missouri. Ator was one of 13 killed after the small commuter plane went down last week. He had seven children and was a doctor with a practice in Pleasant Grove. Money collected will go directly to his family. The fund has been established in his name at any Wells Fargo bank. AMERICAN FORK I The city has applied for a grant to improve Hunter Park in the community's northwest side. The park property has come into question lately as developer Dan Richards asked the city to exchange a less than 1 acre portion of Hunter Park land for land he controls that would be used to extend 1120 North toward 900 West. The request was turned down by the Planning and Zoning Commission. City officials ' ' . one-thir- d CEDAR HILLS Both the Pleasant Grove and Cedar Hills city councils met in the rain Oct. 25 in front of the property at 9724 N. 4000 West in Cedar Hills, or 4242 N. 900 West in Pleasant Grove, to discuss the finalizing of the interlocal boundary agreement. The agreement includes 4000 West900 West as an integral part of a sewer and water line swap the cities have been discussing for the past few months. The e discussion was met with ques? tions and protests from various Pleasant Grove residents living along 4000 West. "It's all about cleaning up property lines," Cedar Hills city councilman Jim Perry said. "We can't have developers paying impact fees to Pleasant Grove, and then asking us to service them indefinitely." No action was taken that evening, though the interlocal agreement was approved by Cedar Hills on Oct. 5 and approved by Pleasant Grove on Oct. 19, subject to approval of an accu- been part of the city's master plan for years. Sierra Hills subdivision developer Ian Dunn told the City Council on Oct. 19 he thought he had an agreement worked out with landowners in the county so they would grant a trail easement through their property in the hollow south of 9600 North, but the negotiations broke down. Dunn presented several ways to address the trail problem. The council voted to accept the option where the developer would pay the city for half the cost of the easement and have the city ' get it from the landowners in the future. map. HIGHLAND A trail easement from the county equestrian park to connect to 9600 North has Council. MAPLETON The City Council accepted in its Oct. 20 meeting a bid from Zions Bank at 4.05 percent to sell a lease to the city for the new community center to be paid over a period. The lease would be for $800,000. The only other bidder for the lease was Central Bank, which offered a 5.8 percent figure for the same amount of money. The building is estimated to cost $1.4 , , Springville, Mapleton in ' ' " million, and the city has been saving money for several ' years to buitythetiew center, I The Pleasant Grove Arts Commission welcomed two new membejrpjodie Kiser and Wendy Hope fre, presented to the City Cupqit pn Oct. 5 by Arts Commttsiqn chairwoman Kristine Dayjjs, Both were appointed unanimously, Kiser has taught art from her private studio for more than eight years. She comes highly recommended and "will be a great asset to the commission," Daynes said. Hope has worked for UVSC as an accountant for six years. Daynes praised Hope's attention to detail. Hope will be the commission's secretary. Saints, will present "I'll Go Where You Want Me to 8 funding options for the future city building at the Oct. 19 City Council meeting, with the council in agreement that funding for the project was still at least four years away and deciding that the city could begin construction on the new city hall on Jan. 1, Managing Security Risks Worldwide" at a Global Focus Series lecture today at noon in room 238 of the Herald R. Clark Building on campus. Dunn oversees' global security for the church with more than 25 years of experience in security risk "management, major criminal investigations, forensic audits and security program desiga As a certified public accountant, Dunn is also a former special agent with the Federal Bureau of Investiga- Go: J. Gregory Dunn; managing director of security for The Church of Jesus Christ of Lat , 2009. SPRINGVILLE I Educators and the public are invited to a special "Evening for Educators" today at 6 p.m. The event will be held at the Springville Art Museum, 126 E. 400 South. Attendees will have the chance ; to experience native culture through storytelling, music, visual arts and drumming as well as a taste table of authen-.- . tic native foods. Packets with detailed lesson plans, overhead transparencies, inf orma-'- . tion on the artists and a music CD will be available for $5. and state credit is available. tion. I The Women's Legislative Council will hear from Kris Poulsen, the Utah County Assessor, at 9:45 a.m. Thursday. The meeting will be at the Provo City Library, on the second floor. For more information, call Suzanne Merrill at 796- 0831. - PROVO SARATOGA SPRINGS I The city staff presented ASSOCIATED was called in, and officials from the various agencies worked to-- , gether to investigate the burial - PRESS Ar- chaeologists have begun excavating ancient skeleton remains believed to be those of possibly five people, probably Anasazis. The bones were found on pri--, vate land at the eastern edge of Kanab in southern Utah last week when a turf farmer was digging a trench to install an irrigation line. "I was on a backhoe ... when . the guy I was working with yelled at me, I saw a big femur bone sticking up," said Tom Willardson, the owner of f . site. " Carbon dating of the bones has not been done, but scientists, are estimating their age based on other evidence uncovered at the site. BLM archaeologists turned over control of the dig to the Antiquities Section of the Utah " Division of State History, said Marietta Eaton, the monument's assistant, manager for cultural and earth sciences. The state controls finds on . state and private land. Eaton said because of the 400-midistance between state antiquities offices in Salt Lake City and Kanab, Utah officials asked BLM archaeologists to act as their agents to evaluate the site and remove the bones so Willardson can continue to work on his sod farm. State Archaeologist Kevin T. Jones said that once the amount of remains and artifacts that would be affected by Willard- son's work are documented and . removed, they will be sent to Salt Lake City for further study. Tom-my'sTu- le "I stopped digging out of respect for who (the bones) belonged to," Willardson said HoicrmUS.),Inc.' Westech Engineering, Inc. Willow Creek PUzt Xanterra Parks & Resorts Justin Hill SALT LAKE CITY j . HlllS ter-da- y THE j H, The Daily Herald Archaeologists excavate ancient skeletal remains Johnstone Supply of Salt Lake ' '; Jordan Commons KP Laundromat s ' , c, Inc. : , , LasueHoteteins 1 Les Olson Company " ' " . . Products Lifetime , $ Marriott International Metafcraft Technologies, Inc. Lake Operations Moroni Feed Company" Mountain West Office Supply MouTttamland Supply i ' i Newgate Mall ' v s, Olympus Clinic , , ' . PAAG, Inc. I. . ' Packaging Corp of America " ' Prospector Corporation f "" - ' PW Eagle ' Rastar Digital Marketing Ream's Food Stores Research Park Associates, Inc. x' Jidertce Inn -- Cottonwood Rite Aid Corporation , Rowland Hall-S- r. Marks School Roy Water Conservancy Subdistrict Rubber Engineering . Saft Lake City Corporation Scots Dale Farm - Snowbird Ski and Summer Resort ' Soullwrn Utah University ; St Mark i Hospital Staker Parson Co; , . . Thorpe North k Western, LLP Electric x ' Unisys Corporation University of Utah , Utah Army National Guard I Utah Department of Corrections ; . VjJlcy Storage Co., Inc. WaisaUh Touring WDHInc. WtterSute University WoodUmd Provo, countywide , Davis County School District . Diamond R Dairy EnviroTech Pumpsystenw Furura Ind ustries Gate Corporation CE Energy Services Goldenwest Credit Union . Granite School District HarrnonOty Associates Hilton Hotel biKKiage 344-254- Advanced Paving & Construction, Inc. Albertsons Alpine School District - America First Credit Union AMSCO Windows Andsarathasen Dairy Ash Grove Cement Associated Food Stores, Inc. ; BD Medical Beaver County School District Bonneville Tower Brickyard Partners J Buchanan Dairy . t Cameo Constfuci ion, Inc. Carlton Towers Association Central Refrigerated Service Chru Fullmer Dairy Classic Cabinets, Inc. , ! Clear Channel Broadcasting ; . .. Oift Building , . . Codale Electric Supply, lite ' Pat Conover 489-565-1 PLEASANT GROVE I A request for final apsubdivision, proval of the 36-lVista Ridge Phase II of Mountain Home Development, located at approximately 2000 West Chapel Ridge Road, was given the OK on Oct. 26 by the City The Springville Herald mm LEHI on-sit- rate Spanish Fork, Salem, Payson, Elk Ridge, Woodland Hills, Genola, Santaquin Thanks to: , . completed the grant application with the full amount of park land, minus the approxiacre of land mately that would be used for the road. There's a word that ifor companies invest in energy efficiency. Monday. He called police, who called the Kane County Sheriff's Office, which called Bureau of Land Management officials at the Grand Staircase-EscalanNational Monument. The discovery is just about a quarter-mil- e away from the Grand Staircase visitors center that opened in June. The state archaeologist also te Smart. total These businesses and other organizations across Utah are sav of energy every year because "nrgy-efficie- nt of nearly 32 million kilowatt-hour- s upgrades they made with the help of the Energy FinAns$7ncl FinAnswer Express incentive programs from Utah Power. Using less energy not only means saving money, many of rt-companies are also enhancing their productivity and employee All good news for the bottom line. And if s good tor the rest of us because it helps assure a heaHLstitftgy supply for our region and if s better for the environment. Thanks to these organizations for choosing FinAnswer programs and leading the way in energy efficiency. y Earning Your Business, Saving you money tmiv 51'' Call Today! 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