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Show Page THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, 4 Monday, November 14, 1988 Clear skies, except in West Skiers getting wish it's snowing By The Associated Press UTAH - North - Winter storm warning mon-tain- s above 6000 feet this afternoon and tonight. Snow advisory in the northern valleys tonight. Gusty shifting winds and turning colder tonight. Colder with occasional snow tonight. Decreasing to snow showers on Tuesday morning. Clouds and showers decreasing Tuesday afternoon. Lows to30s to low night mostly 20s. Highs Tuesday upper forecast for Monday Daytime Condioons and High Temperatures Accu-Weath- er I SHOW V.)wXaXim I ut lOOO. 40s. South - Snow advisory mountains above 6000 feet late this afternoon and tonight.Turning colder this tonight. Scattered snow showers with rain and snow mixed in the valleys tonight, decreasing in the western portions by Tuesday morning and eastern portions by Tuesday afternoon. Lows tonight mid 20s to mid 30s. Highs Tuesday 40s to EiPKl75"f Pacific VV Ocean Southwest Valleys and Deserts - Tuesday, clouds and snow showers decreasing with partial clearing. A chance of measurable precipitation at Cedar City 70 percent tonight and 20 percent Tuesday. Southeast Utah - Tonight, scattered rain or snow showers and much colder. North winds 10 to 20 mph. Snow level lowering to around 5500 feet. Tuesday, variable clouds with scattered rain and snow showers. Sevier Valley - Tonight scattered snow showers and turning colder. North winds 10 to 20 mph. Snow level lowering to around 5500 feet. Tuesday, clouds and snow showers decreasing with partial Wasatch Frong, Great Salt Lake Desert, Cache Snow advisory tonight. Occasional light Valley snow or snow showers, snow accumulationsfrom 1 to 3 inches possible with locally heavier amounts near the mountains. North winds 10 to 20 mph. Tuesday, clouds and snow showers decreasing in the morning with partial clearing in the afternoon. North winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of measurable precipitation at Salt Lake City 90 percent tonight and 30 percent Tuesday. clearing. IDAHO - Snow and rain ending from the west this evening. Partly cloudy tonight with areas of fog and low clouds. Chance of snow Tuesday with rain lowest valleys. Highs Tuesday in the 30s to lower 40s. Lows tonight in the mid teens and 20s. Southwest Idaho: Decreasing clouds and showers this evening. Partly cloudy tonight with areas of fog and low clouds. Increasing clouds Tuesday. Castle Valley - Snow advisory tonight. Tonight, occasional light snow or snow showers and colder. Snow accumulations of from 1 to 3 inches possible with locally heavier amounts near the mountains. Tuesday, scattered snow showers in the morning, decreasing with partial clearing in the afternoon. FRANCIS 86, of Francis National obituaries ' Parley Byron Mitchell, died Friday, Nov. 11, died Saturday age 90. panies. Born 6-- Cassie Button Catherine "Cassie" P. Bufton, 90, of Spanish Fork died Friday, Nov. 11, 1988 at the home of her daughter in Alta -Loma, Calif. Pentre, ' l i Ton Scuth Wales to John and Ann Lewis Phillips. She married Wil liam Henry Bufton, June 15, 1925 in Spanish Fork. Their marriage was later I solemized in the Manti IDS Temple. He died July 8, 1971. Cassie Bufton 6-- r 1 $4, Takeo Miki University, spoke against the possibilwar with the United States in in the govern1938, when militarists ment tried to suppress such sentiments. ity of Nancy Briggs Rooker Richards Funeral services will be held Thursday 11 a.m. in the Edge-mo5th Ward IDS Chapel, nt Mojave Lane, Provo. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo Wednesday, 8 p.m. or at the ward chapel a.m. InterThursday ment Provo City Cemetery. Archaeological meeting The Utah County Chapter of the Utah Statewide Society monthly meeting will be Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Amanda Knight Building, 50 Archaeological E. 800 N., Provo. Dale Burge will be speaking on Archaeology and History of Also Dr. Joel Utah Exposition Janetski will lead a discussion on the proposed antiquities legislation. Anyone interested in Archaeology is welcome to or attend. Call The BYU Small Business Development Center wil sponsor a workshiop on starting businesses on Tuesday 9 p.m. in 184 Tanner Building. The workshop, a video presentation produced by Inc. Magazine and AT&T, is designed for prospective entrepreneurs with little management experience or business education. There is no fee for the workshop, but participants should by calling RichNancy Briggs Rooker 53, of Provo, died Sunday, Nov. in Provo. Funeral will be 11 a.m. at the Edgemont 5th 1988 Thursday, Ward Chapel, 3030 Mojave Lane, Provo. Friends may call at Berg Mortuary. 185 E. Center, Provo, Wednesday 8 p.m. a.m. or Thursday at the church Burial in the Provo City Cemetery. 6-- WfflR t A R V PRO V.4-666- I 8 Merrill Hansen Funeral services will be held Wednesday 11 a.m. in the Walker Mortuary of Provo. Friends may call one hour prior to services. Interment to Provo City Cemetery. Cathrine "Cassie" Bufton Funeral services will be held Wednesday 11 a.m. in the Spanish Fork 4th Ward IDS Chapel. Friends may call at the Walker Mortuary of Spanish Fork Tuesday 8 p.m. or Wednesday one hour prior to services. Interment Spanish 6-- Fork City Cemetery. er 2. Wills, trusts seminar Death notices 5 E. 500 S. 1. 7-- at the University of California at Berkeley and Japan's Mei-- ji M O R T Nursing Center, Tim- panogos Community Mental Health Center and Utah State Hospital will sponsor a seminar entitled, "Understanding Disease," to be at the Excelsior Hotel, 101 W. 100 N., Provo. The seminar begins with a breakfast and registration at 8:30 a.m. followed by several speakers. Luncheon is 1:30 p.m., after which there will be more sessions and speakers. There is a charge. Cail Scott Dorsey at Carewest-Ore- Starting a business Miki, who studied 13, ve WYOMING - Snow, heavy at times in the mountains with up to a foot accumulation possible. Scattered snow showers north, becoming mostly cloudy elsewhere. Highs lower 30s and 40s, some low to mid 50s southeast. Snow east tonight but 15 decreasing west and turning colder. Lows 10 to 20s elsewhere. Tuesday far west, teens and becoming partly cloudy west with scattered mountain snow showers. Snow and windy east and much colder. Highs in the 20s and 30s. MONTANA - East of the continental divide, snow early tonight with locally heavy snowfall in the mountains. From 1 to 3 inches expected in the valleys with 6 to 10 inches in the mountains. Cloudy north tonight with scattered snow showers and easterly winds 10 to 25 mph. A few lingering snow showers east on Tuesday otherwise partly cloudy. Highs Tuesday 25 to 35. Lows tonight teens. West of the continental divide: clearing and cold tonight with widely scattered snow showers. Partly cloudy on Tuesday. Highs today low 30s and Tuesday 25 to 35. Lows tonight teens. EM vnlls and trusts and preserving your estate will be Tuesday at the Provo City Utilities Building Auditorium, 251 W. 800 N., at 7 p.m. It is opened to the public and is free of charge. Two local men from Mason Adams and Company, estate planning experts, will explain the complexities of planning an estate, wills, living wills, the dangers of joint tenancy, privacy, tax avoidance, probate. A seminar on Virginia Cutler Lecture Stephen J. Bahr, professor of sociology at Brigham Young University, will discuss "Family Relationships and Adolescent Drug Use" Tuesday at BYU. Delivering the 24th annual Virginia F. Cutler Lectur, Bahr will address the College of Family, Home and Social Sciences at 7:30 p.m. in 1111 Smith Family Living Center (Stepdown Lounge). AMI November meeting The Utah County Chapter of the Alliance for the Mentally 111 will hold its November meeting at the Eldred Center (lounge) on Tuesday at 7 p.m. The meeting will show a new video on the subject of Mental Illness by Delores Ottley, President of UAMI and will also review some of the main speeches from the National conference in Boulder. Following the presentation will be a short business meeting and a sharing time for members. The group normally meets each third Tuesday of every month. For further information on the group or the meeting call 7354393. "Amahl" Symposium A free symposium to enhance the public's enjoyment of the sweetest of all Christmas operas "Amahl and the Night Visitor," will be presented Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Women's Council Building, 310 W. 500 N., Provo. June Chipman, chairman of the opera section open to the public. The lecture series is sponsored by the BYU chapter of Sigma Xi as part of a national promotion and encouragement of research in all fields of science. Steven R. Covey seminar of the women's council said the chil-drechorus and some of the leading singers including Amahl will sing a selection of the songs and the story will Popular lecturer Steven R. Covey will present a seminar entitled "Six Major Events of the Restoration," p.m. in room 2258 of the Conference Center, BYU Campus. There is a fee. Call for information, registration. be discussed to help people appreciate the opera more when it is produced by opera West in December. The public is invited. Food 378-67- "Space Wars" and "Exploring the Planets" will be among topics discussed by top experts from Brigham Young University and Utah State University in Flea Market of Ideas lectures Nov. at BYU. Two lectures will be presented daily beginning at 1 p.m. in 321 Wilkinson Center. All presentations are free and open to the public. On Tuesday, Capt. Gregory L. Morgan, from Aerospace Studies at BYU, will deliver a speech on "Space Wars." He will be followed at 2 p.m. by W. Kenneth Hamblin of the Geology Department whose topic is "Exploring the Planets." Allan J. Steed, from the Space Dynamic Laboratory and Electrical Engineering Department of Utah State University, will open Wednesday's lectures by discussing "Space-Base- d Exploration Using Infrared Sensing." Frank J. Redd of the Mechanical Engineering Department at USU will speak at 2 p.m. on "Man's Return to the Moon." Thursday's lectures will begin with BYU's Douglas M. Chabries, chairman of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, asking "Is a Picture Really Worth 1000 Words?" At 2 p.m., Douglas E. Jones, from the BYU Physics and Astronomy Department, will conclude the series with "Space Physics: A 'Far Out' Way of Doing Science." The Flea Market of Ideas lecture series is sponsored by the BYU Honors Program. 15-1- 7 Wednesday tests Blood sugar On Thursday, Nov. 17, Springville High will host the first annual Nebo District College Planning Evening. All interested Nebo district junior high and high school students and their parents are invited. Informaticn will be presented pertaining to planning a high school course schedule for college preparation, scholarship and financial aid, military financial aid, military academies options, and Utah colleges and business school options. The program will be held in the SHS auditorium p.m. Call Kathy Templeman, SHS counselor, Free stress class set Utah Valley Regional Medical Center is sponsoring a free lecture entitled "Ushering Depression and Anxiety Out of Your life," to be held in the hospital's Outpatient House, 1161 N. 300 W., Proor vo. Space is limited. RSVP ext. 2458. 0, Cholesterol tests The Spanish Fork Family Care Center, 775 N. Main, will be offering a simple finger stick cholesterol test for a fee Thursday 10 a.m.-- 6 p.m. Call Family Care Center, 7984696. monthly luncheon are invited to the monthly luncheon, Thursday at noon at the Excelsior HoteL Speaker will be Carol Berry, state board of education, "Communication Style Differences Between Men and Women." There is a fee. RSVP to Corrina Moore by Tucdsay. Cancellations must be received by 2 p.m., Wednesday. All WIMCO members 377-47- The Springville Family Care Center, 385 S. 400 E., Springville, will be offering blood sugar tests to determine a person's blood sugar level as a possible indicator of hypoglycemia (low) or diabetes (high) on Wednesday 10 The screening, which will cost SI, is not a diagnostic test Participants are asked not to eat within two hours of the test. Call a.m.-noo- n. Arthritis Support Group "Arthritis and Family Coping Skills" is the topic of the Provo area Arthritis Education and Support Group meeting at 7 p.m. in the Clark Auditorium at the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, 1034 N. 50 W., Provo. Dr. Brad Edging-toa psychologist at the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center Pain Clinic, will speak on the impact of arthritis on families and friends. Call LoJean Anderson, n, Quilt Guild meeting The Utah Valley Quilt Guild will meet Wednesday at the Eldred Center, 270 W. 500 N., Provo. There will be a Trunk Show featuring Vaudis Hall. The public is welcome. CPR Class Mountain View Hospital will be conducting a CPR class at the Mountain View Professional Plaza, 730 E. 300 S., Springville, 4:30-:3p.m. The class is a certified American Heart Association class. There is a fee and those attending should call for reservations and pick up the book before class. Call ext. 166. Linda Graham at 0 Post elections lecture A lecture will be given by W. Cleon Skousen and John L. Harmer, entitled Where do we go "Post Elections From Here?" 7 p.m. at the Cotton Tree Inn, Aspen Room, 2230 N. University Parkway, Provo. Make reservations with National Center for Constitutional Studeies (NCCS) headquarters in Salt Lake City, Divorce, marriage lecture Linda Karlson, M.A. and teacher with Patey Center for Human Resource Education, will present a free lecture and discussion on "Divorce, Marriage and Expectations," 7:30 p.m. at the Provo Utilities Building, 251 W. 800 N., Provo. Open to public. Call Heart Association The American Heart Association will hold its first organizational meeting at noon in (lining rooms 1 and 2 on the third floor of the Tower at the Utah Valley Regional Medical Center, 1034 N. interested in 500 W., Prove Anyone building an active Heart Division in Utah County is invited to attend this meeting. RSVP to Clark Car as. Public Relations, UVRMC, Sigma Xi Lecture 6. American Foreign Policy A professor of international relations at the University of South Carolina will Future of speak on "The Long-TerAmerican Foreign Policy" at a Brigham Young University lecture Wednesday. Charles W. Kegley Jr. will address students and faculty at 11 a.m. in 238 Herald R. Clark Building, the David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies. professor of psychology, Burlingame will speak at noon in 262 Kimball Tower. The speech is free and Ardeth Kapp to talk Ardeth G. Kapp, general president of the Young Women of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints, will address Brigham Young University students Thursday as part of the Family Living Lecture series. She will speak on "Where There is No Vision, the Family Perishes" at 7:30 p.m. in the Wilkinson Center Ballroom. The speech is free and open to the public. y Executive lecture The vice chairman of JCPenney Company will speak at a Brigham Young University Executive Lecture Thursday at 2 and 4 p.m. in 710 Tanner Building. David F. Miller started as a salesman for J. C. Penney in 1953. He held various positions with the comptny until he was elected vice chairman of the board in 1987. Ground water meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. in Spanish Fork City's Council Room, 50 S. Main, a public meeting is scheduled to discuss the draft of ground water quality protection regulations. Copies of the draft regulations are available by writing or calling the Bureau of Water Pollution Control at P.O. Box 16690, Salt Lake City, Utah 841164690, (801) Visit Jefferson Institute Springvule's Grant School second grade class will visit Jefferson Institute to "boot camp" learn about the week-lon- g seminars. They will also learn the importance of investment price fluctuations and bow computers are important to the business world. Other educators interested in field trips to Jefferson Institute are encouraged to call Jacque Lesher, ROHDOCK'S Funeral Flowers REE DELIVERY St, Ortm 1042 S. Stat 225-310- 0 FLORAL Thursday 7. Latin American series professor of history from the University of West Indies Trinidad and Tobago will speak to Brigham Young University students Thursday as part of the David M. Kennedy Latin American Speakers Series. Margaret Rouse-Jone- s will discuss "The United States and the Caribbean" at 8 p.m. in 238 Clark Building, the David M. Kennedy Center for International Studies. The speech is free and open to the public. A PROVO Soup 'n Salad Seminar Riverwood Hospital, 1067 N. 500 W., Provo, will hold a seminar beginning at 12:30 p.m. Lunch is $1 per person. Don Bortchardt, M.Ed will discuss "Getting the Proper Educational Services for your Child." RSVP Richard B. Wirthlin, President Reagan's pollster for the past decade and one of the chief strategists for the 1980 and 1984 presidential campaigns, will discuss the recent presidential election and the 1988 campaign at Brigham Young University Thursday at 11 a.m. He is one of a series of speakers sponsored by the Department of Communications and will appear in the Pardoe Theatre of the Harris Fine Arts Center. 49-369- 1. "Warm Fuzzies Vs. Professional Therapy" will be the topic Thursday when Gary M. Burlingame, associate director of the Comprehensive Clinic at Brigham Young University, delivers the Sigma Xi lecture of the month. An assist- ant . Elections lecture 3. WLMCO faU-Mounta-in View Hospital invites the public to attend the annual Fancy Holiday Food demonstration Thursday, 2 p.m. in the cafeteria. Kimball Anderson, dietary director, has arranged to have foods of all sizes, shapes, colors and tastes available. Hospital employees will share their favorite Christmas ideas and recipes. College planning Flea Market of Ideas 756-62- minister prime (rim 1974 tn 1976. ards, Alzeimer's seminar set Carewest-Ore- 1857-186- 1. scandal, died today at age 81. Miki served in Janan's House of Representatives for a record 51 consec- utive years begin ning in 1937, and as t 6-- ' in Indian I Charles G. Sammons (Okla- noma), Sammons was orphaned at age 11. He went to live with an aunt in Piano, near Dallas, and started a grain and hay business when he was 19. In 1928, he entered the insurance industry and, 10 years later, formed Reserve Life Insurance Co., a stock-lif- e insurance firm that made his fortune. He formed Sammons Enterprises in 1962 to facilitate ownership of his companies. Sammons also was active in Dallas civic and charitable organizations and was a benefactor of health care and arts institutions. Takeo Miki TOKYO (AP) Former Prime Minister Takeo Miki, who sought to reform the governing par ty's economic poli- 1 Josephine Leavitt AUred Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m. in the ' Saturday Slate Canyon Ward Chapel, 715 .Utah Avenue, Provo. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo Friday 8 p.m. or at the ward chapel Saturday one hour prior to services. Interment Provo City Cemetery. 6-- 1898 225-01- Vivian Jensen Moulton, 62, or 1988 in Orem, died Monday, Nov. 14, Orem. Funeral is pending and will be announced by Berg Mortuary. Berg Mortuary Services 3030 at cies after Prime Minister Kakuei Yanaka resigned amid a financial She came to the United States in 1911 and settled in Spanish Fork where she has resided since. She was a member of the American Legion Auxilary and the Spanish Fork Senior Citizens. She worked for the Nebo School Lunch Program for a number of years. She was a member of the LBS Church. Survivors include one daughter and two sons, Mrs. Lorin (Sally) Anderson, Alta Loma, Calif.; William Bill Bufton, Spanish Fork; John Donald Bufton, Pay son; nine grandchildren; 32 great grandchildren. Service will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Spanish Fork 4th Ward Chapel, 381 E. 400 North. Friends may call at "Walker Mortuary, 187 S. Main, Spanish . Fork, Tuesday 8 p.m. and Wednesday one hour prior service. Burial will be in the Spanish Fork City Cemetery. 373-184- in Ardmore, Territory grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. Ruby Louder, Kamas. Funeral will be Wednesday, 1 p.m. in the Francis Ward Chapel. Friends may call at the Crandall Funeral Home in Kamas, Tuesday 8 p.m. and at the church Wednesday one hour prior to service. Burial in the Francis Cemetery. 1897 in 94-1- board of Sammons Enterprises Inc., a conglomerate of insurance, cable tele vision, travel, in dustrial supply and bottled-wate- r com Conn'.; Mrs. Milan (Mavis) Venn, Roy; Mrs. Robert (Geraldine) Fenton, Pleasant Grove; Mrs. Lamar (Janet) Keyes, Sunset; 13 grandchildren, six great- was born The Integration Workshop will help says parents understand what PL about this issue and how to go about getting an appropriate education for their child in the least restrictive setincluding neighborhood schools. ting The Utah Parent Center is offering this workshop designed specifically for parents of children served in special programs including resource, speech therapy, physical and occupational therapy, social skills training and self contained or classes. Call Karen Hohne Kids On The Move Sammons was chairman of the fe is survived by a son and three y'ailghters, Chad Mitchell, Chesire, She Integration workshop Charles Sammons Charles G. Samand philanthropist, He was born Oct 13, 1902 in Francis to Byron T. and Emmiline Anderson Mitchell. He married Clara Louder, April 23, 1932 in Provo. She died Dec. 11, 1986. ' He was a member of the Church of Saints. Jesus' Christ of Latter-da- y Dec. 8, Tuesday DALLAS (AP) mons, a billionaire 1988. NEVADA - Northern and Central Nevada. Showers decreasing from the west tonight, becoming partly cloudy west by Tuesday morning. Partly cloudy on Tuesday with a few snow showers over the east. Colder with high temperatures in the upper 30s to mid 40s. Overnight lows from the teens to the mid 20s. Southern Nevada: Partly cloudy tonight with a few showers over the mountains. Partly cloudy on Tuesday. Colder with highs in the 50s to mid 60s. Lows tonight in the mid 30s to mid 40s. Calendar Obituaries Parley Mitchell By The Associated Press Snow piled up today in parts of the West, making travel difficult in many areas from the California mountains to the northern Rockies and causing minor accidents, but much of the rest of the nation enjoyed clear skies. By late Sunday evening, up to a foot of snow had fallen in the Jackson, Wyo., area and numerous auto accidents were reported because of the weather. The only vehicles going over Teton Pass, west of Jackson, were vehicles with chains. An additional 8 to 14 inches of snow was expected in the area this morning. In the Sierra Nevada, 8 to 10 inches had fallen at Echo Summit. Truckee, Calif., reported 6 inches of snow. "We've got blizzard conditions out there," said Sonja Liles, a dispatcher for the California Highway Patrol in Truckee. "We've had probably 200 accidents, but no fatals ... and only several minor injuries." As the storm developed over Nevada, winds gusted up to 64 mph. Clear skies were reported this morning from the Middle Atlantic States across the middle Mississippi Valley, central and southern Plains and the southern Rockies to the desert Southwest. Rain extended across parts of the West Coast and New England, and dense fog developed across the Gulf Coast, northern Florida, and southern Appalachians. Today's forecast called for a major winter storm from the northern Rockies and northern Plateau into the Great Basin; rain and snow from the Dakotas across the central Rockies to central Arizona; scattered thunderstorms in parts of New Mexico and Arizona; rain in Oregon and California; and showers in Maine. Winds were expected to be gusty at times from the Southern California mountain region across the central Rockies to the central Plains. WASHINGTON - Western Washington: Increasing clouds tonight with chance of rain on the coast. Cloudy Tuesday with occasional rain coast and chance inland. Highs upper 40s to lower 50s. Lows 30s. Eastern Washington: Fair tonight. Increasing clouds Tuesday. Highs mid 30s northto mid 40s south. Lows 20s. nearT50. Salt Lake City, Ogden and Provo- - Snow advisory tonight. Tonight occasional light snow or snow showers, decreasing in the early morning. Northerly winds 10 to 20 mph. Lows in the 20s. Snow accumlations of from 1 to 3 inches possible with locally heavier amounts possible along the benches. Tuesday, clouds and snow showers decreasing in the morning, with partial clearing in the afternoon. Breezy north winds. Highs in the low to mid 40s. Chance of precipitation 90 Percent tonight and 30 percent Tuesday. Lows in Highs Tuesday in the mid 30sto mid 40s. zus. acumeasv iumu the mid teens to mia Scattered snow showers tonight decreasing late. Windy tonight. Partly cloudy with local morning Ln the 30s to around fog Tuesday. Highs Tuesday 40. Lows tonight in the teens to mid 20s. jA l ore and Sympathy 375-809- 6 409 N Intercity Ave. J J J) "Our Flowers Say What The Heart Whisper" - 197 North 500 West 373-700- 1 Provo |