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Show Page - THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, 16 Friday, November 22, 1985 Grove Ponders Neighborhood Watch PI. Weather Ferre recommended that all By JOHN BEST Pleasant Grove Correspondent North County - 11 PLEASANT GROVE The need to organize Neighborhood Watch Programs in Pleasant Grove is a major concern of Police Chief Mike Ferre. Ferre told the mayor and city council that a good Neighborhood Watch Program can be one of the best assets a city can have to eather Map 30 00 reduce burglaries -SAN FRAWCISCO LOS ANGELES ' p:3-Jk IdENVER ST. I 57yKLANTA I J I LOUIS I I I 1 LOWEST TEMPERATURES J "My concern is that in many of the burglaries, a neighbor has seen something strange, but not reported it until police start asking questions. We want people to call us whenever they see anything that is not normal or appears unusual or suspicious. They do not have to determine if anything is wrong. Our people will do that. If everything checks out okay, there is no harm done. We do not mind checking reports. The goal is that some of the suspicious activities may lead to the apprehension of burglars or other criminals," said and other getting people together in small groups, preferably two blocks or less, and getting them to watch rv 1E0CMO ( the past several months, as have neighboring cities. crimes. Ferre met with the mayor and council in an attempt to increase community awareness about the effectiveness of Neighborhood Watch Programs. "The heart of this program is 30,00 their neighbors' homes," said Ferre. Pleasant Grove has been struck OPI WEATHER FOTOCAST with burglaries repeatedly many hours of investigation and save citizens from becoming victims of crimes. It makes a safer and better community and also can offer insurance savings in some cases where Neighborhood Watch is in force." band together to fight crimes in their areas. "The best way is to form an organization with a chairman. Our police are willing to train groups on ways to make Neighborhood Watch Programs work. The main thing we want to do is take away peoples' hesitation so they will call us in the event of anything suspicious." neighbors Ferre. during Pleasant Grove Mayor David Holdaway said, "I am convinced we need to get this program going in the city. We know its value and need the extra protection and help in reducing crime. We are having meetings in our neighborhood now to set up the Neighborhood Watch Program and hope other neighborhoods will do the same." Compact Dhc Specialist I Best Selection fastest Semen On Special Orders By United Preai International ' ' ' Central Utah: Increasing cloudiness today with a chance of afternoon or evening snow showers; decreasing cloudiness and showers Saturday and becoming partly cloudy: highs today and Saturday in the upper 30s; lows tonight in the low to mid 20s; probability ol measurable precipitation 30 percent this afternoon, increasing to 40 percent tonight, the decreasing to 20 percent or less Saturday. Logan: Mostly cloudy today with scattered afternoon snow showers; scattered snow showers continuing tonight, decreasing Satur- day and becoming partly cloudy; highs today and Saturday in the lower 30s; lows tonight near 20. St. George: Variable high cloudiness today and warmer; partly cloudy tonight with increasing cloudiness Saturday; highs today and Saturday in the mid 50s; lows tonight in the upper 20s. Mike Ferre concluded his presentation to the council members by saying, "The Neighborhood Watch is exciting because it really can reduce crime and help us save M2"-- . ! ANY j t 15.98 LIST COMPACT DISC I !5"-- Northern Utah: Increasing cloudiness day with scattered afternoon and evening snow showers; a lew lingering snow flurries Saturday; highs today and Saturday in the 30s; low tonight in the low to mid 20s. to- Southern Utah: Parlly cloudy through tonight; increasing cloudiness Saturday; highs today and Saturday from the upper 30s into the 40s; lows tonight in the low to mid 20s, except near 30 in the warmer areas. Southeast Idaho: Cedar City: Variable cloudiness and warm- er today with southerly afternoon winds; partly cloudy tonight; increasing cloudiness Saturday with southerly afternoon winds; highs today in the mid 40s and Saturday in the lower 40s; lows tonight in the mid 20s. Travelers' advisory through early tonight; cloudy and windy today with periods of snow; snow ending tonight but some blowing and drifting snow; becoming partly cloudy Saturday: highs today and Saturday in the 20s; lows tonight five below zero to five above. Witt to Lead Utah Foundation and has served as senior analyst and as research director. Witt as executive director of the foundation to replace Henry R. Pearson who will retire on Dec.31. Prior to his employment with Utah Foundation, Witt worked for Griffenhagen & Associates, an international management consulting firm. He worked on "Little Hoover Commission" studies in Illinois and Minnesota, and was involved with a highway study for the state of New York. He also served with the U.S. Army during World War II in the European Theater of Operations. 1947. 'Witt, a native of Chicago, graduated from Brigham Young University with a degree in economics. He was awarded the Alfred P. Sloan fellowship for graduate work in a government management at the University of Denver and received a master of science degree from that institution. He joined the staff of Utah Foundation in 1950 I "It's like the world is coming to an end right before your eyes," said Annie Laurie Rivers, the wife of the civil defense director in Apalachicola, Fla. "Phone booths are flying around like balsa wood." Kale evoked fears along the Atlantic Coast, where torrential flooding two weeks ago killed 48 people and caused more than $750 million in damages. Georgia and South Carolina were drenched Thursday night with rains spawned by Kate, which was centered over south central Georgia by early today. Albany, Ga., was inundated with nearly 4 inches of rain, and upstate South Carolina was hit with up to 2 inches. Flash flood watches were issued for Georgia and parts of the Carolinas, Virginia. Maryland and West Virginia. Besides the deaths caused by Kate. 11 people have been killed nationwide in torna acdoes, Hooding and other weather-relate- d cidents this week. Snow fell today from the pacific Northwest to Michigan, prompting winter storm watches in Washington and Oregon. Temperatures were near or below zero early today across the northern Plains and northern Rockies. In Seattle, a city notorious lor its rain. 6 inches of snow fell Thursday, forcing school children and office workers to go home early and jamming downtown hotels. Ten inches of snow was expected by today in Washington. Most schools in the Puget Sound area were closed today, and officials at the Seattle-Tacom- a International Airport, which was closed, were ursure if runways would be opened because of more snow in the forecast. Dozens of fender-bender- s were reported in Seattle and King County, but there were no deaths or injuries. "Nothing serious, just a lot of misery," said a Seattle Police spokesman. Wind-chireadings today were in the 20 to 40 degrees below zero range in the northern Rockies and northern Plains, with Kalispell, wind a chill of 38 below Mont., reporting zero. Two to 5 inches of snow were forecast for Michigan. Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa. Strong winds combined with blowing snow to cut visibility to near zero in some areas of northwest Nebraska. National Temperatures By United Press International City Albany Albuquerque Anchorage Atlanta Bakersfield Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth Eureka Hi Lo 45 28 57 24 20 11 Pep .... .... .... 69 54 88 52 39 .... 51 36 38 -- 7 01 02 15 10 .09 24 16 33 28 28 10 .... .... .... .... .... 35 28 05 40 34 .... 38 31 .27 .... .... .... 57 35 69 54 Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Ls Angeles Memphis Mlami Beacn Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York Oakland Oklahoma Citv" Omaha Palm Springs Paso Robles Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland. Me. Portland. Ore. Rapid Citv Red Bluff 40 . - 34 u 32 21 56 50 35 50 45 80 77 .... .... .... .... .... 32 29 18 16 67 55 37 67 62 34 26 19 68 45 55 32 59 37 09 68 46 37 33 26 .... .... .... 54 50 42 29 07 27 24 52 28 35 29 08 Reno 42 21 15 .16 .... .... .... Richmond Sacramento 41 30 43 40 St. Louis 38 31 .18 Salt Lake Citv San Diego San Francisco Seattle Spokane Washington 32 10 65 52 53 45 .... .... .... 29 21 .21 14 08 14 48 41 Fairbanks 05 -- 9 Fresno Great Falls Hartford Helena Honolulu Houston 56 38 .04 -3-- 48 02-- .... .... .... .... 30 10 82 68 71 56 ' 38 25 08 -- 3 64 Friday Temperatures and wealher conditions I rum midnight to midnight on previous dav Hi Lo Wthr 28 cdv 45 .Amsterdam - Athens 68 55 dr 91 77 clr Bangkok M MM "Barbados M MM Beirut 37 46 cdv Belgrade s'n 34 28 Berlin M M M Bermuda 6ti 41 cdv Bogota - Brussels 32 cdv 36 75 69 rn B'Aires M M M Cairo IHJ ' Calgary 11 sn 81 66 cdv Caracas 34 32 cdv Copenhagen 43 37 cdv ' Dublin 1 Frankfurt 30 34 ,' Geneva Havana Helsinki 'long Kong i .anbul - ! Jerusalem Jo'burg ' Kiev 27 London 43 45 clr 39 cdv Madrid Manlla 48 27 84 72 Montreal 39 32 Moscow 21 .assau Delhi Nicosia 82 54 75 50 clr 38 32 9 a.m. Preliminaries Rio Rome San Juan Santiago Sao Paulo Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei 25 ly cdv 77 73 rn 5" 50 cdv 12-- 798-704- 5 NORWEGIAN PROFESSIONAL Tickets: Tel Aviv Tokyo 71 56 clr Toronto Vancouver H2 59 dr Vienna 19 14 cdv Warsaw 21 66 54 clr 66 80 61 clr clr 41 36 34 27 37 CLASSIC SKATING OREM 224-419- Jt JS II t Potiderosa 7 INCLUDES SALAD AND LARGE A An! OuMO'mI II SI .11 r-10- f J7 99 sWF DRINK 16-o- z. SPAGHETTI CHICKEN MEATBALL FRIED STEAK S3. 29 DINNER $2.69 STEAK FISH 'irf LADIES FRIED CHILDREN'S PLATE A CUT CHICKEN STEAK BOB $3.99 SIRLOIN DINNER DINNER S3. 99 $3.99 $4.99 - Friday SPANISH FORK 985 NORTH V MAIN SPANISH FORK Wfi)Vlil STREET 985 MAIN STREET Pdone Phone 798 2B85 791 11 9:30 p.m. tltgant dining ipcritnct, beautiful PRIVATE " m) i 10 nw Chintt BANQUET FACILITIES FOR dcor A litufly atmotphtrtt 30 TO 50 PEOPLE DISCOUNT ON 31 E9 th PienMf 631 B9I 0"Vf-l- O Gl Ntt to Husky IBS B9 ESS B9 n i 3 M M RH MM Ml - fm LUwn Irirl "jhed t Si r"?h "'.' " f3.jM mIi with Chouses Km 2 t,l soups. u- - - "1C"',"", thru mm Chopped Slea 1 i Cat Station) BBS I I ..A- &FRI 5 Convenient Locations 2100 South 2100 Ea.t 5678 So. Redwood Rd. 5476 South 9th Eail e p m 373-720- South SSHf I ALL MEALS! Opn Evry Day! Sunday 3 00 p m to 10 I42S SOUTH STATE STREET, PROVO, ISi x if rviP m 1 BRING THIS COUPON AND RECEIVE RSB 'if in 111. ,"i'l'MtmlBi(((Wl""i.! v LUNCH SPECIALS EVERY DAY FROM $2.95 DINNERS FROM 3.95 LB t 2885 MANDARIN. SZECHUAN CUISINE ANO SELECTIONS Of SEAFOOD I w nil i" & All Wondtri Of China In First Wok Good Taste! An or JT-- -V ... ISM 30 cdv M M M I I i l Saturday NORTH rn cdv i "m&m.jr jsm, u BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY MENU AVAILABLE STORE HOURS Mon. Thurs. 11 P.M. ll 'T -- Mi. SIRLOIN DINNER $3 79 "In1 TtCNS RESTAURANT e admission Friday SATURDAY to 3 p.m., 3 to 5 p.m. and 7 to 11 p.m. 28 RATING Gt'IDE FOR FAMILIES G: "General Audience." A film most parents would find suitable for the entire family. I'G: "Parental Guidance Suggested. " Parents are cautioned they would probably consider some material unsuitable for children. Parents are urged to Inquire about the film before deciding on a child's attendance. PG-13- : "Parental Guidance Suggested for Those I'nder 13." warned that some material is likely to be unsuitable are Parents These films are often too Intense or suggestive for for youngsters to view. material and those II: "Restricted." Film contains adult-typunder 18 are not admitted unless they are in the company of a parent or adult guardian. Motion Picture Aisoc. of America Monday Irench fries, choice ot soup or dinner salad, our special Sundowners cheese toast, and a large 16-o- z drink cdy 84 in 378-462- 3 This delicious platter is served wim cnoice oi oaKeo poiaio. mashed potatoes, or clr ciy General Dancing Awards Ham Steak Dinner 09 clr M M M 32 LATIN CHAMPIONS row, platform, 263 Richards Building 10-- $7-fro- Available cdv 30 cdy 41 36 rn 87 68 cdv 57 45 cdv M M M 79 50 clr 82 66 cdv 45 cdy 54 90 75 cdy 6:30 p.m. Finals GUEST STARTS Johan & Nadia Eftedal 2 36 Peking M M M Saturday, November 23, 1985 Wilkinson Center Ballroom, BYU IMkw clr 70 cdy 48 cdy sn 32 cdv DANCE CHAMPIONSHIPS OPEN WEEKDAYS 5:00-10:0- 0 SUNDAYS 12-- 6 LUNCH clr 58 59 0sl Pans Thanksgiving 43 70 (ity AND ROLL THIS WEEKEND 250 So. State BALL Closed .... L"na lsb"n Mexico 1985 MEDALS Be Our family wishes you and yours a very happy holiday I Global Temperatures By The Associated Press Koad Spanish Fork. Day .44. 37 .61 presents the LET THE GOOD TIMES .... .... COUPON- -- BYU BALLROOM DANCE COMPANY Competition r !is$i5 VALUABLE Fiifiicii 2()IOCanvon We Will Daniels advises using chains or drive vehicles when traveling in the cutting areas. For further information contact the Heber Ranger District ofiice. 1 few ts vars Of Mnkinn Occasions' areas will be open for cutting. Bench Creek area will be open Nov. 29, 30 and Dec. 1, while Noblett's area will be open Nov. 29 through Dec. 15. FRIDAY 1 nK-9He- ttah first-serve- 4 to 6 p.m. and 7 to 11 p.m. 299 frailt "20 Two .33 .16 1 Crest The permits will be issued from the district office, 125 N. 100 E., Heber City, on a first-comd basis, at a cost of $2 each. .... .... .... .... .... .... j Nov. 24, 1985 txpim Oak Eight hundred Christmas tree tags will be available on the Heber Ranger District of the Uinta National Forest beginning Nov. 25, according to Roy Daniels, district ranger. .19 .25 49 45 Christmas Tree Tags Available e, Coupon Witt is married to the former Norma Meldrum of Provo. They have three children. He is active in National Summary By United Press International Frigid arctic winds blew a wall of snow across the nation's northern reaches today, dropping wind-chil- l readings to 38 below in Montana, while soggy Atlantic Coast states were doused with rain spewed by Hurricane Kate. Kate blasted across Florida's Panhandle h winds that Thursday evening with killed two people, unroofed houses, toppled a water tower, spun off tornadoes, triggered fires and plunged cities into darkness. church and civic affairs and is a member of the Salt Lake Rotary Club. Pearson has been with Utah Foundation since 1946 and has served as its executive director since I . 2 1.98 LIST IP OR TAPE 1 I .Utah Foundation's Executive Committee has named Allan J. - p "VALUABLE COUPON ANY Regional Forecasts & M c 1985 Donderosa Inr 0wrn? . 260 East 1300 South Or-- m (Wett of Fred Meyer) 1875 Weit 5300 So., Roy Coke I |