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Show THE HERALD, Provo, Utah, A4 Page Sunday, December 8, 1991 Government groups seek consensus on Utah Lake By JOSEPHINE ZIMMERMAN Herald Staff Writer am amazed at the amount of planning that has gone on concerning Utah Lake, but nothing has been done," Homer dandier, director of Mountainland Associa- "I tion of Governments, told the Council of Governments Thursday night. Cnandler said MAG has a feder-a- f grant to study development around the lake and make recommendations. One scenario is to do nothing and let nature take its course, while other options involve dredging and cleaning the lake for recreation-oriente- d development and commercial and residential development, he said. He praised County Engineer Clyde Naylor for his assistance in putting together demographic and topographic maps for the study. Chandler said he plans to meet with the different organizations and agencies that have some area of control on, in and around the lake, such as the Division of Wildlife services, State Parks and Recreation, State Lands and Forestry, and others. "We'd like to see if we can gain some kind of consensus from these agencies. We have already met with the boating association," he said. He said his organization plans to put together a study of the various types of development planned and will then conduct public hearings to gain input from citizens. He anticipated that by February there should be some tangible results and reocmmendations. COG also heard from Malcolm Evans, director of the Youth Detention Center at Ironton, who showed a film demonstrating the need for a new center in Utah County. He said the present center was built in 1952, and has been remodeled twice but is outdated and inadequate to the point where it puts the staff and children at risk. He urged COG to support efforts to have the Legislature "at least give us planning money for a new facility." The film showed asbestos-wrappe- d pipes throughout the building, water leakage, blind spots in the building, no sprinkling system, inadequate food prepara- tion and laundry facilities, and many other problems. During 1991 the facility has been over capacity 31 percent of the time. Karen Thorn, who sits on the Board of Corrections, pointed out that Utah's youth detention system has a record of success that is unrivaled throughout the nation. "People are coming here from other states to see how we do it, and they are shocked that we have the rate of success with the facility we have here," she said. The group authorized Gary Herbert, COG chairman, to draft a letter to the Legislature urging support for a new facililty. Cory Tanner, executive director of the Red Cross, showed a film on the work of the Red Cross and said his board plans meetings with the various city councils in order to explain the need for Red Cross services. Lynn Mason, chairman of the County Library Committee, told the group her committee has toured all the library facilities in the county and found them varied. The Bookmobile serves well, but has limited library functions, she reported. "We can expect growth in both the north and south ends of the county," she said, noting that her committee will make a report in February on recommendations for improving library services. Some recommendations may include a mail-i- n program, outreach to nursing homes and convalescent centers, networking between libraries, a courier service between libraries and greater access to libraries. Salem may- Randy Brailsford, or, asked the group to urge legislative support of a project to dredge Salem Pond. "The governor came down and saw our situation and pledged $100,000 in his budget, but we need to make sure the legislators support it in January," he told the group. COG voted to support the Claude Taylor Virgil Hartvigsen , Virgil Burrup Hartvigsen, 83, died fi; 19S1, in Provo. was bom July 21, Ward, near Downey, Idaho, the eldest of! ah children of Wil- liam Edward and! Elizabeth Fox Bur- Tup. She married! Milton Farrell Hart vigsen, March 17,1 1929, in the Logan IDS Temple. He lat-- i f er died. 1 her i. She received early education in ..She Idaho. 1308, in Dec. Grant 5 inI A .w- fed She where she acted In school plays and sang in choral groups. She then attended Ricks College in Rex-bur- g, Idaho. Following Iter marriage, she and her .husband lived in Grace and Pocatello, Idaho; Los Angeles, and finally in Provo in 1956 where her husband was the dean of the College of Physical Education at ;BYU. She worked for several years in the Division of Evening School at BYU during 'registration. ,She was an active member of the LDS 'Church and served in many positions. She enjoyed family history projects, garden-lintravel, entertaining, BYU athletics Tuid church activity. She was also a member of the Literary League and Arnica Clubs. Survivors include two daughters and IJwo sons: Mrs. Max D. (Lois) Morrill, Ogden; Mrs. Ted D. (Bonne) Simmons, Salt Lake; Dr. Richard N. Hartvigsen, -Bountiful; M. Kip Hartvigsen, Rexburg, tldaho; 14 grandchildren, 14 one sister, Mrs. Dean (Marjor-.je- ) Henderson, Provo; one brother, Clyde 1 Burrup, Downey. She was preceded in Tdeath by two brothers, one sister and a granddaughter. - Service will be Tuesday at noon at the ;Edgemont North LDS Stake Center, 4300 N. Canyon Road, Provo. Friends may call '.Monday, 8 p.m., at Berg Mortuary, 185 E. Center, Provo, and Tuesday at the jchurch one hour prior to service. Burial will be in the East Lawn Memo-."ria- l Hills Cemetery, Provo. Contributions may be inade in lieu of flowers to the Dr. Milton F. Hartvigsen Scholarship Fund, College of Physical Education, 212 Richards Building, BYU. during World War n, tlie Korean conflict and the Vietnam conflict He served in Europe, Greenland and throughout the United States. He retired in Jan. 1967 from the Air Force. He was a member of the Golden Kiwanis Club and the Harmonica Band at the Orem Senior Citizens. He attended services at the LDS Church. He moved to Orem in 1975 where he has lived since. Survivors include his wife, Orem; two daughters, Mrs. Robert (Claudia E.) Benson, Provo; Mrs. Kenneth (Lillian F.) Lurin, Salt Lake City; 16 grandchildren, three three brothers and two sisters, Raymond Taylor, Ruby Neely, Julius Taylor, all of Taylors, S C.; William Taylor, Aiken, S.C.; Clara Owens, Fountain Inn, S.C. He was preceded in death by a son, Olin Lee Taylor and a brother. Service will be Wednesday at 11 a.m. at the Timpanogos Park 6th LDS Ward church, 935 N. 300 East, Orem. Friends may call at the church Wednesday, one hour prior to service. Burial will be in the Timpanogos Memorial Gardens, Orem, under the direction of Berg Mortuary. Full military rites will be accorded by VFW District No. 4. Two people pleaded not guilty to various charges Friday during 4th District Court criminal court action. Sherry A. Campbell, 39, Bountiful, pleaded not guilty to e forgery. Her trial will be Jan. 9, 1992, in Judge Boyd L. Park's court. second-degre- Harold G. Knox, 29, 222 N. 1200 West No. 132, Orem, pleaded not guilty to two charges of selling cocaine. A trial date will be set after a competency examination is completed. The matter was continued to Dec. 20. first-degr- ee In other arraignments, Jorge L. Quintana, 19, 264 W. State No. 26, Pleasant Grove, pleaded guilty to a charge of third-degraggravated burglary, reduced from a first-degrcharge. He will be sentenced Jan. 3 and as an illegal alien faces possible deportation. The third-degrcharge carries a possible penalty of up to five in prison. ee Wally Fackreil - James Wallace "Wally" NEPHI Fackreil, 79, died Dec. 6, 1991, in Payson. He was born April 25, 1912, in Mt. View, Wyo., to James Ar thur and Laura Deborah Stevens Fack'S'lSE? 9 1? reil. He married Melda Feb. the Manti Marian Alice Musser Gunn, Vegas died on Dec. 6, She was 1991 in a I .as Vegas Hospital. born July 28, 1923 in Logan, a daughter of William S. and Christina Mae Arnold Musser. She married Ralph Charles Gunn, Sept. 29, 1943 in Salt Lake City. Their marriage was later solemnized in the Angeles Temple of the Church of Saints. Jesus Christ of Latter-daShe attended schools in Logan and graduated from Logan High School. She attended Utah State University from 1940-4where she was affiliated with the Chi Omega Sorority. She raised her family in Southi rn California. She moved to Bountiful in i. t where she lived for some 10 years before returning to California. After her husband's retirement she moved to las Vegas where she has resided since. She was a talented musician and com-- ; poser. She loved golf and was the presi- dent of the Women's Auxiliary of the ' Oakridge Country Club in Fannington. She was a member of the LDS Church , and served in all the church auxiliaries. Survivors include her husband of Las ; Vegas; two sons and one daughter; David ' F. Gunn, Provo; Mrs. David (Christina I Lynn) Barker, Sun Francisco; Charles A. Gunn, Salt lake City; 7 grandchildren; t one sister, Mrs. Bruce H. (Shirley) Jones, Woodland Hills, Calif.; one son, Ralph Christopher Gunn preceded her in death. ; Services will be Tuesday at noon In the - Neil S. Miigleby Mortuary In Richfield. ''newts may call at the Mortuary Tues-- . M. '.lie lii, ,i j,M(,r ii, the services. Burial "ill le in 'hi l(iciliei City ','einetery RICHFIELD of Las y 3 Cory D. Short, 19, 385 N. 600 East, Pleasant Grove, pleaded burguilty to two second-degre- e burglaglaries and a third-degrry. Three other charges were dismissed. He admitted entering a convenience store after hours and taking beer on one occasion and on another entering two homes without permission, seeking a man he and three friends intended to assault. He will be sentenced Jan. 10 and faces one to 15 years in prison felonies and on the second-degre- e up to five years on the third. ee AdamG. Lake, 18, 297 E. 300 North, American Fork, pleaded guilty to receiving stolen property and credit card fraud, both second-degre- e felonies. Another credit card fraud charge was dismissed. Judge Ray M. Harding ordered the man to the 90-da- Diagnostic Unit y Vick-er- s, i fi,, 19, 1946, in LDS Tem- ple. He was an active high priest in the 1 t:5 IDS Church. He retired from NRP after 25 years of service and was a farmer in the Nephi area. He was a veteran of both World War II and the Korean War. He was a past American Legion Commander of Post No. 1. He was an instructor for the Fish and Game Hunter Safety Course for over 30 years. Survivors include his wife of Nephi; son and daughters, Bay B. Fackreil, Grass Law-soValley, Calif.; Mrs. Brent (Joann) Annabclla; Mrs. Craig (Laura) Newton, Payson; Mrs. John (Janice) Staley, Ogden; Mrs. Brad (Betty) Ballow, Nephi; 10 grandchildren, one one sister, Mrs. Carl (Maxine) Palmer, Elko, Nev. He was preceded in death by two sisters and five brothers. Service will be at 11 a.m. Monday at the Nephi Stake Center, 351 N. 100 West. Friends may call Sunday, p.m., and Monday one hour prior to service at the Anderson Funeral Home, 94 W. 300 North, y 6--8 Nephi. Burial will be in the Vine Bluff Cemetery, Nephi. Although closely identified with the Netherlands, the tulip is not of Dutch origin hut tonus from Central Asia. County Commission Chairman Malcolm Beck said the commission is putting together a Solid Waste Committee as required by the state. This committee is mandated to make an inventory of solid V" 1 waste and waste management facilities, a cost analysis of the management system, and estimates of future solid waste generation rates and costs. Also in the study will be siting strategies for new or expanded solid wate management facilities and a plan for implementing the goals and recommendations. Beck ask the group to submit recommendations of individuals to serve on the committee. The County Commission plans to appoint the committee on . '. at' A, W'lif at the prison to determine if there is a program available that will help him. He will return Feb. 28. Chad Corbett, 20, 640 E. 100 South, Spanish Fork, pleaded e guilty to three counts of while two were others forgery f ' 5," I fO ""V- 1 i Z I ""sss5l r- - . i Herald PhotoJason Olson third-degre- demonstrates the snow shovel he's invented, he which says cuts shoveling time by Dale two-third- dismissed. Ricky Shane Wright, 19, address not available, pleaded guilty to attempted burglary and theft, both third-degrfelonies. Three other charges were dismissed. He will be sentenced Jan. 10. Scott Shaffer, 40, 273 Clegg Circle, American Fork, pleaded By PATRICK CHRISTIAN Herald Staff Writer guilty to an amended charge of second-degre- e child abuse. He had pleaded not guilty to a aggravated sexual abuse of a child and a trial was set this week but he opted to plead gilty to the lesser charge. He will be sentenced Jan. 17. A local inventor believes he has found a better way to shovel snow. And like a better mousetrap, he hopes people will flock to the stores to buy it, whenever it finally reaches the stores. The new shovel moves snow off the sidewalk without requiring as much lifting or touch up. According to Dale W. Nelson, there's less bending and it's quicker as well. "I got very tired of bending over a conventional snowshovel that spews snow out both sides, and requiring me to go back and pick up the trailing ridge of snow left behind," said Nelson, Orem. So he made a prototype that is higher on one side and angled 35 degrees. When a shoveler pushes it, snow is moved only to one side. He said it's a lot like the blade of a snowplow that throws snow to one side or a farm plow that moves dirt to ee Bart E. Papworth, 32, 718 N. 945 West, Orem, pleaded guilty to a second-degre- e charge of selling cocaine. Other charges against him and his wife, Jennifer Papworth, will be dropped. He will be sentenced Jan. 10. Daryl A. Johnson, 20, 925 N. 400 East, Lehi, pleaded guilty to a class A retail theft and a charge of receiving stolen property. Another retail theft charge was dismissed. He will be sentenced Jan. 3. third-degr- ee Rick Reinardy, 36, address not available, pleaded no contest to e criminal mischief e theft charge while a third-degre- second-degre- was dismissed. tenced Jan. 3. He will be sen- Jose Luis Silva, 23, Ogden, repleaded guilty to second-degre- e class-and stolen property ceiving evading. Three other charges were dismissed. He will be sentenced Jan. 3. A By SONNI SCHWINN Herald Correspondent By KAYLENE NELSEN Timber HEBER CITY A dispute Lakes between the Homeowners Association and the Wasatch County Solid Waste Disposal District was settled in court last week folbattle. lowing a two-yeThe district's original policy was to charge $9.25 per month can of to pick up one trash from every residence in the county. Because most Timber Lakes homes are secondary residences and not occupied year round, they homes were charged for only eight months of service per year. The roads through Timber Lakes, southeast of Hcbcr City, are private and some are difficult for the garbage trucks to negotiate. Therefore, rather than having a cannister at each home, residents had to take their garbage to commercial trash cans placed at the entrance of the recreational subdivision by the garbage collection contractor, AutoCart. The homeowners sued the county, claiming they were being charged residential rates but receiving commerchl service, which only costs $25 per can. They further charged that the homeowners 440-gallo- n association qualified as a commercial user as defined in the district's policy and contract, and that the commercial containers were on property owned by the association, not the residential lots. They claimed they were paying more than $2,000 per month more for residential service than they would be if An Orem man has been ordered second-degre- e sex abuse charge. Arnolfo Luna, 34, 405 S. Main, Orem, was in 4th District Court Friday for sentencing on the charge. He was found guilty in an August trial and was back from a y evaluation at the prison. The recommendation from that evaluation was prison. Judge George E. Ballif said he would recommend that the man be required to pay for the victim's therapy as part of his parole from prison. Luna was acquitted during his 90-da- they were only paying the com- mercial rates for the service they were getting. Last February, the county bought out AutoCart and took over the garbage collection. County officials agreed the Timber Lakes homeowners were paying more than they should and made several offers that were turned down by the association. One of those offers, according to Commissioner Pete Coleman, was for each resident to pay about $44 per year. He said state law requires owners of secondary homes to pay 25 percent more in property taxes than for primary homes, and 80 percent of those additional taxes could be used to subsidize their garbage fees. In court, the judge ordered the Timber Lakes property owners to pay $44.40 per year, beginning Jan. 1. The county is also required to pay $13,500 in Timber Lakes' attorney fees, $13,000 of which will be paid by the county's insurance company. The commissioners voted one side. Nelson said the invention works very well, but since he is left handed, his prototype is a lefthanded model. He said production models would have to be right and left handed. But he said he would probably just ignore left handers like himself left handers since represent just two percent of the market place. He's now searching for backers for the nearly $55,000 cost of bringing his idea to market. "This really moves snow," he said. "It can cut removal he said. time by Does he think his idea fits in the category of a better mouse trap? "I would say so," he said. Modular light-weigutility carts that he invented are already being used at BYU and elsewhere, and so are his designer marble pedestals and shelves. The inventor is still working on a design for a recreational aircraft. two-third- ht pedal-power- Orem man ordered to prison to prison on a Court settlement reached in Timber Lakes fawsnsl s. Local inventor may have better way to shovel snow ee first-degr- Nelson Herald Senior Reporter ar Sarah Marian Gunn his edu- He served cation. Downey High School in 1927 I Corps shortly after completing graduated from R8, Claude Olin Taylor, 78, died Dec. 6, 1991, in Provo. He was born April 14, 1913, in Green ville County, S.C., to Washington Lee and Lillian Maude Byrdl"" Taylor. He married Audrey Elizabeth g" Barnett on July 4, 1942, in Panama City, Fla. He received his ed-- 1 ucation in South Car olina schools. He entered the Army Air I r . project. ee " - tW probation violations and was sentenced to up to five years in prison. Brian Scott Coles, 28, 336 S. 550 West, Orem, was supposed to be sentenced but instead was ordered to go to the Diagnostic Unit evaluay at the prison for a tion to help the judge determine what, if any program, can help. He will enter the program Dec. 9 and return Feb. 7. 60-da- Duane A. Smith, 20. 144 S.' 500 East, Provo, will return March 6 from a y evaluation at the prison. He will then be sentenced on a second-degre- e charge 90-da- ofissuingabadcheck. trial of raping the daughter of his girlfriend but was e convicted on the ROHBOCK'SN FUNERAL FLOWERS second-degre- charge. In other sentencings Friday, Melvin Eugene Smith was ordered to prison on a e burglary. He was in court because of 042 S. Stat third-degre- 225-3- CIVE A LIVING GIFT Flowers & St., Ortm 1 00 J PROVO Plants For Every Occasion FLORAL "Our Flowers Say What The Heart Whispers" Orem 225-43- 197 North 500 West 373-700- 1 Provo 57 BEESLEY MEMORIALS to pay the $500 balance. The homeowners have the option of using individual on their properties, can-niste- "?:f 3 . - rs or monument business. Our experience means you get quality, beauty and value in memorials for your loved ones. commercial cannisters at the entrance. But some will have to continue to deliver their trash to the entrance because the garbage collection trucks can't get to their homes safely. The county commissioners said they would notify homeowners in other recreational developments that their garbage fees will be adjusted the same as limber Lakes.' are now In our 101st year In the We BEESLEY MONUMENT AND VAULT CO. 725 South State, S00 East Provo Across the street, east of Provo Cemetery Phone 374-058- 0 |