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Show Page 10 - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, Friday, August 2, 1985 I tovo Weather Map 110 By NANCY BRINGHURST ouncii snows Complian tewoter Treatment tows contaminate the resulting sludge. Prevent pollutants from passing through the wastewater system into other receiving waters of the Herald Staff Writer SAN FRANCISCO LOS T- - jDENVEw wSlATLAMTA AWOeitt If actions by the city council are any indication. Provo" citizens can be assured their city is meeting state and federal laws governing the collection and treatment of wastewater. Tuesday, at a public hearing, council members reviewed for the third time an extremely detailed ordinance which spells out those regulations. The ordinance is scheduled for final passage at next Tuesday's council meeting. Federal regulations require that the city pass the ordinance and have it fully implemented bv Oct J WIkA OALLASN -r1 HtOHCST-i- J l?UISy. TEMPERATUfieS ( UPI WEATHER FOTOCAST " ; ft jmpwiM no Weather 1. 1985. The objectives are to: Prevent the introduction of pollutants into the city's wastewater system which might interfere with the operation of the system or Regional Forecasts By The Anocltted Preii in the north and east with some lingering showers mainly along the Montana border Highs in the '70s except lower 80s in the southern valleys East Central Idaho Mountains Tonight. vanaoie clouds with widely scattered showers and thundershowers early then decreas mg slowly after midnight Lows 30s and 40s Saturday, patchy morning valley fog other wise partly cloudy with some lineerine show ers along the Montana border Highs mid-0- s to the upper 70s Camas Prairie and the Lower Wood River Valley Tonight, decreasing clouds, showers and thundershowers turning fair with to patchy fog after midnight. Lows mid-30- s lower 40s Saturday, fair Highs mid-70- s to lower 80s Lewiston, Palouse, Grangeville Tonight, decreasing clouds, showers and thundershowers this evening becoming partly cloudy after Saturmidnight Lows upper 40s to mid-50to mid-80- s day, partly cloudy. Highs mid-70- s Colorado Mostly cloudy tonight with numerous evening showers and thunderstorms. Local heavy rain, especially in the mountains and east. Partly cloudy Saturday with widely scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms most numerous in the mountains. Highs Saturday upper 60s to around 80 in the mountains, 80 to 90 elsewhere Lows tonight upper 30s and 40s mountains, 50s and low 60s at lower elevations. Central Utah Tonight, becoming mostly fair Cooler Lows in the low and mid-50- s Saturday, sunny Highs in the mid-BO- s Utah Cooler statewide tonight. Sunnv on Saturday Highs north in the 80s and south in the 90s to near 102 Lows upper 40s to near - 60 Northern Idaho Clouds, showers and thundershowers decreasing this evening becoming partly cloudy late tonight and Saturto mid-BOLows tonight day Highs mid-70- s mid-40- s to mid-50s- . Southwestern Idaho Fair all sections tonight and Saturday. Highs 80s to locally near 90 Lows tonight mid-40- s to lower 50s Southeastern Idaho Mostly cloudy towith night widely scattered showers" and thundershowers Partly cloudy Saturday with some lingering showers or thundershowers along the eastern and northern borders. to lower 80s Lows tonight in Highs mid-70- s the 40s Northern and Central Nevada Cooler northeast Mostly sunny and warmer Saturday. Highs 85 to 95 Saturday Lows tonight upper 30s northeast to near 50 west and central Southern Nevada Mostly sunny with some afternoon clouds Saturday Highs mid-90to near 110 Saturday. Lows tonight 65 to 75. - Magic Valley Tonight, decreasing clouds, showers and thundershowers becomfair after midnight. Cool with lows in the ing 40s Saturday, fair and warmer Highs upper 70s to mid-80West Central Idaho Mountains Tonight, decreasing clouds, showers and thundershowers turning fair with patchy valley fog after midnight Lows 30s to lower 40s. Saturday, fair in the west and south but partly cloudy - Arizona Mostly cle?r far west portions and variable clouds with scattered locally heavy showers and thundershowers central and east portions mainly this evening Mostly clear west portions and partly cloudy with scattered afternoon and evening thundershowers east portions again on Saturday A little warmer Saturday. National Summary By The Aitoclated Preii Showers and thunderstorms dotted the West, the nation s midsection and South today after a killer thunderstorm dumped a record rainfall and four inches of hail on Cheyenne, W'yo Scattered showers and thunderstorms spread from the High Plains across the Rockies to the northern Pacific Coast and from the lower Mississippi Valley across the Southeast Rain dotted the region from a to Delaware Severe weather also hit the South, with high winds downing trees in Alabama's Jef ferson and Sumter counties, in Georgia near Monticello and in Mississippi near Macon and Collinsville Today's forecast called for showers and thunderstorms spread across the central High Plains, northern Rockies and eastern Gulf Coast states; scattered thundershowers over the lower Mississippi Valley, southern Rockies, southern Atlantic Coast and interior sections of the Pacific Northwest; and mostly sunny skies elsewhere. Highs will range from the 70s across the northern Great Lakes, states. New England and interior sections of the Pacific Northwest to above 100 in the desert Southwest. National Temperatures By The Associated Preii Friday Temperatures i ndicate previous day's high and overnight low to o a m. HI Lo Pre Otlk 77 50 Albany clr 87 59 .12 cdy Albuquerque Amarillo 91 66 cdy 67 58 Anchorage cdv Asheville 77 63 43 clr Atlanta 91 70 .32 cdy Atlantic City 75 64 clr Austin 98 74 cdv Baltimore 77 63 clr 87 64 40 Billings m 92 21 70 Birmingham cdv Bismarck 78 60 cdy Boise 77 50 clr Boston 7 58 clr Brownsville 94 76 c(jv Buffalo 75 52 clr 72 49 Burlington. Vt clr 90 60 Casper cdv Charleston.SC 93 74 43 clr Charleston W V 75 59 02 clr Charlotte. N C 87 61 05 clr 116 82 56 6 Cheyenne cdv 75 51 Chicago clr Cincinnati 77 6 cr Cleveland 74 53 cr Columbia.SC 17 93 70 clr Columbus. Oh 76 53 clr Concord N H 76 45 clr Dallas-K- t Worth 102 77 clr 76 53 Dayton clr Denver 80 62 08 cdv Des Moines 79 59 rn Detroit 78 54 clr Duluth 77 50 cdy El Paso 94 65 23 cdv Evansvillr 79 61 clr Fairbanks 75 57 rir 79 60 rn Fargo 69 49 Flagstaff r(jy Grand H.iruds 79 50 clr 87 54 Great Falls rn Greensboro. N C 85 63 06 clr Hartford 79 52 clr Helena 88 57 rn Honolulu 90 76 clr Houston 77 96 cdv 76 57 clr Indianapolis 81 Jackson. Ms 73 96 rdy 21 90 Jacksonville 75 rn 31 57 Juneau 52 rn tut 71 59 74 91 67 66 60 69 69 77 a 99 71 Milwaukee Mpls-S- t Paul Nashville New Orleans New York Norfolk. Va North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland. Me Portland. Or Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis 73 56 81 87 60 66 .25 clr 93 74 01 cdv 81 80 66 05 clr clr 77 64 92 66 74 60 93 74 81 62 84 79 93 94 83 55 73 52 76 60 76 54 64 Barre Wilmington De clr cdy rn clr 19 clr clr clr clr 77 67 clr clr rn clr clr clr clr rn clr cdv clr clr cdv clr cdy cdy cdv cdv clr cdv cdv clr clr 76 65 cdv 75 53 81 61 clr clr 81 66 79 47 81 64 85 58 73 61 91 a .31 cdv 75 05 78 96 70 96 76 77 68 70 59 90 74 77 48 77 58 99 79 76 72 60 57 76 52 84 74 88 70 03 National Temperature Extremes 109 degrees at High Thursday afternoon laughlin, Nev Low Fridav 39 degrees at Burns morning Ore - Global Temperatures By The Aitoclated Preii Lima Lisbon Friday Temperatures and wealher conditions from to midn.'ght midnight on previous day HILoW'thr " 66 57 cdv Amsterdam 9C 77 clr Athens M M M Bangkok R6 71 cdy Barbados 90 83 clr Beirut 61 82 clr Belgrade 68 55 cdv Berlin 86 78 clr Bermuda M M M Bogota 48 cdy 66 Brussels 48 clr 59 B Aires 75 clr 100 Cairo 54 rdy 77 Calgary f 'auras 66 clr 81 55 66 cdv Copenhagen M Dublin MM runkluil '.enei.i Havana Helsinki liui g K i,i Jerusalem '"burg Kiev 55 clr 72 Bf) ell MM 59 idy 81 clr 88 70 72 73 41 fir (lr 54 ir 48 73 M 66 65 84 57 63 cdv clr Undon Madrid Manila Mexico Citv Montreal Bfi 64 clr 90 73 cdy 73 54 77 54 Moscow 73 59 rn clr clr Nassau Vw DHhi Nicosia 91 71 rn 82 cdv clr cdv M M M 102 75 Oslo 76 Paris Peking 70 90 54 54 71 Km 87 57 Home San Juan Santiago Sao Paulo 93 64 90 75 64 36 82 57 Seoul Rl 79 Singapore Stockholm Sidney 9(1 75 59 72 Tdii Christopherson Open House Set clr cdv clr cdy cdy cdy cdv 65 97 88 Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan P R St Ste Marie Seattle Shreveport Sioux Falls Spokane Syracuse Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington Wichita Wilkes Provo weather in Julv was a little wetter and a little warmer at night than normal, according to weather observer David James. Despite six straight davs of 100 degrees-plu- s at the first of the month, the average high temperature was only 93.5, .5 lower than normal. The average low was 60.7 degrees, compared to a normal of 56.8. "The cloud cover kept the nights warm," James explained. The Fourth of July topped the temperatures for the' month, with 104 degrees, and the last day of the month registered the lowest overnight temperature, 49. "We had six clear days, 15 partly cloudy days and 10 cloudy davs." James added. Rainfall measured 1.58 inches, 263 percent above the normal of .6 inches, with 13 consecutive days of measurable precipitation. July's 19 days of thunderstorms, James noted, would probably be a record if such records were kept. While most of the county came in with between one and two inches of rainfall, a few locations were considerably damper. Fairfield "in west Utah County had its wettest July ever, with 5.24 inches. "That's about half their normal annual rainfall," noted James. Orem recorded over 2.5 inches, aided by a cloudburst on July 18 that turned State Street into a river. Since the 1985 water year began last Oct. 1. Provo has" measured 19.8 inches, compared to a normal cdv clr clr clr 101 102 St Temperatures Only Slightly Over Average of 13.06. Kansas City Las Vegas Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midlnd-Odess- of the ordinance cdv cdv clr clr clr clr cdy rn rn rn MM V "It's so simple, I don't know whv we didn't think of it before," Utah County Commissioner Gary J. Anderson said of the solution as the three commissioners emerged from a meeting with Orem City officials, including Mayor DeLance Squire, and Provo City Mayor Jim Ferguson, American Fork" Mavor Malcolm Beck and Springville Police Chief Leland Bowers. The solution calls for the county to take note of work municipal prosecuting attorneys are doing for county prosecutors. That work is to advice. prisoners the county houses for the municipalities. Or, the county could consider other things the cities do flood prevention work which Provo does. Deputy County Attorney Margaret Nelson has warned the county to continue to bill cities for use of the jail, a legal opinion that didn't sit well with Orem officials. be advice and the commissioners be foolish not to take the would considered compensation for Payson Lakes to Be Handicapped" individuals mav A fine of $299, or a prison term of not more than six months, or both, may be issued against anyone who knowingly falsifies any portion of the wastewater permit applica- tion, or any other document relating to the ordinance. three-fourth- tion staff officer for the Uinta National Forest. Payson Lakes "Touch America Project" is to be constructed as a unique prototype for barrier-fre- e recreation areas, as an addition to d the Payson Lakes campground in Payson Canyon. Coleman said the project will provide a barrier-fre- e recreation area which will allow the handito capped and come together in an adventure and learning experience. There will be interpretive displays which will communicate messages on the en newly-remodele- "It's interesting that most of the counties in the state have not taken that position," said Orem City Attorney Bryce McEuen, noting most counties pay for all county jail expenses. Squire told the commissioners letters from every community except Cedar Fort were calling for the jail bills to be considered a county function. When McEuen and Squire pointed out that Orem and other cities, in the spirit of cooperation, are already handling first appearances in circuit courts and thus saving the county money by not having that expense in the district courts, the commissioners said they realized they might be able to consider that expense a trade-of- f for jail use. As a result, they can take - NEPHI Juab Countv and Ne- phi City have both recently set mill levies for the coming year. Juah County Commissioners set the county lax lvv ut 18 milk Nephi t'ltv (axp n-- rs will p,iv 14 - or materials to help. Items needed include asphalt, concrete, tables, grills, PVC pipe, sprinkler heads, lumber, etc. Sucess of the Payson Lakes TAP project depends on contributions of sponsors who agree that the benefits of community cooperation are more than a fair return on investments made in time, money and resources, Coleman said. "By combining efforts to organize work projects and community resources, we can work together to make our National Forests better places to enjoy," Coleman said. Volunteers are invited to call the Uinta National Forest office Ln Provo. THE BEST OF EVERYTHING! Lowest Prices Large Frame Selection Skilled Opticians Free Adjustments .rf. 3'Lc v-r- V. ' O a 1 Jl v 3U 1 1 -- ASP"5" so .,i-- yi'- - iOC n Hi - ?4 Vienna 7!( 59icli Wjivm 70 Mnv Orem: university Mall Salt Lake City: Crossroads Plaza Creekside Place (across from Cottonwood Mall) Sandy: 743 East 9400 South (near Aloertson s) Logan: Cache Valley Mall 224-177- 363-767- 272-656- f : MasterCard 1 2 566-721- 1 753-474- 7 Ogden: ogden City Mall Offices throughout Utah 621-424- Open All Day 6 Saturday Professional Eye Examination Available I veil li. 7 mills their deputy attorney's advice and still assume the responsibility for future jail bills as long as the county receives a contracted Barrier-Fre- e vironment and also the ethics ot forest use. The project will involve cons struction of a mile surfaced trail around the shoreline of Payson Lake, construction fo fishing piers designed to allow the handicapped user access, and construction of a day-us- e area. Touch American Project (TAP) is a program whereby the community and its youth can come together to work on projects designed to enhance and conserve natural resources, Coleman said. Young people learn work and communication skills while becoming aware of the environment. He said there will be opportunities for all who can volunteer time soon have a new barrier-fre- e recreation area in Utah County, according to Gary Coleman, recrea- Set 85 Mill Levies 7o li Limits and conditions on permits in detail. The city may file civil penalties against any user who willfully or negligently violates any provision of the ordinance. are also spelled out Complete Optical service The Hly lew is do.m 12 pn cciil Ironi last yen 's I:, 12 percent The (i.uiils lew is , up ;is( ' li running dispute between Utah settled. Juab, Nephi nulls , A for example as compensation for use of the county jail. "Its a trade-off,- " Anderson said. Going into Wednesday meeting, the county and the municipalities were at an impasse. The municipalities recognized the county had the right to charge them for use of the county jail, but insisted that causes bookkeeping problems. The county, on the other hand, recognized it would be more efficient if it were to assume the responsibility, but it maintained its lawyers had advised them against doing so. "The fact of the matter is, it (jail bills) is something better handled by the county," lamented Anderson, but he added that the county pays its attorneys to offer legal County and its municipalities concerning who should pay future jail bills appears on its way to being 3- ih W rates. 1 ill h uinouin Each user must provide protecagainst accidental discharge into the city's wastewater system, states the ordinance. If an accident occurs, the user must immediately notify the city. Within five days of the accidental discharge, the user must also submit a detailed written report describing the cause of the discharge and the measures taken to tion lit u 7:i l,.ki tion. avoid future problems. Expenses stemming from such an incident are also the responsibl-it- y of the user liable for the accident. Users required to obtain a waste-wate- r contribution permit under the ordinance must provide answers to 13 detailed questions ranging from name, address and location to the average daily and peak wastewater flow graduated from 79 79 By J.J. JACKSON Herald Staff Writer Brigham Young University, and moved to Fredonia. Ariz ." where he was principal of Fredonia High School H? then moved to new York City, earned his Masters Degree in Education from Columbia University and returned to Provo to become Scout Executive for the Utah National Parks Council of the Boy Scouts of America. Lucile was born in Overton. Nev. to Christian F. and Elizabeth G. Weenig. She was raised in River-ton- , graduated from Jordan High School, and met Merrill in his capacity as Scout Executive while she was working as secretary in the general offices of the YMMIA in Salt Lake City. Following their marriage, they lived in Provo. They founded Provo Flying Service in 1940. and provided flight training for over 4.000 people dur-in- g the next 22 years. They have four children: M. Kent Christopher and Mrs. Max Mary Michaelis, Salt Lake City: Mrs James (Ann) Calder. Provo, and Robert J. Christopherson, Orem They have 15 grandchildren K6 9f, with its operation is on the forbidden list. Noxious liquids, gases, or solids which could create a public nuisance or hazard to life must be prevented from entering the system. Any wastewater with an objectionable color to it is not allowed. Temperatures are regulated and may not be above a certain point. If a user violates one of the regulations, the city will advise the user of the problem and the user is then expected to correct the situa- Jail Dispute Settlement Near 9 90 71 Tel Anv city, Improve the opportunity to recycle and reclaim wastewater and sludges from the system. And, to provide for equitable distribution of the cost of the city's wastewater system. Provisions "of the ordinance include certain rights granted to the city, its residents, and to customers of Provo's wastewater system. Measures to protect the "system and its end users are listed in detail. Some of those regulated items include: Materials which may be of an explosive or flammable" nature, or which may cause injury in anv way, are not allowed to "enter the system. Anything which could obstruct the flow in a sewer or interfere The children of Merrill D. and Lucile W. Christopherson will honor their parents for their 50th wedding anniversary with an open house Saturday from 6:30-- p.m. at the Women's "Culture Center, 310 West 500 North. Provo. All friends and relatives are invited. They were married Aug. 1, 1935 in the Salt Lake City Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints. Merrill' was born in Mapleton to Christian A. and Ardell Jensen Christopherson. He attended Provo City schools, ff if Free Guarantee: . broken glasses repaired or replaced at no cnarge tor one year. |