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Show Churches will hold special programs Sunday Many of the areas churches will have special Christmas programs this Sunday, Dec. 20. . . In the Mona LDS Ward, a special Christmas choir presentation entitled "There Came a Star will be given. The cantata will feature scripture reading and choral music. Marc Vest will be the reader, and solo parts will be sung by Forrest Stringham, Blaine Jones, Darlene Fowkes, Ann Spotten, Rick Wright, Henry Ewell, Milton Neilsen, Katherine Kay, Earl Fowkes, and Kimo Coray. The choir is directed by Betty Ellertson and accompanied by Emalie Jones. The meeting will begin at 10:50 a.m. At the Community Bible Church, the cantata Thanks Be to God will be sung by the Junior Sunday School, and Tonya Walker will give a flute solo, Silent Night. The cantata will be followed by the church worship service. Everyone is invited to join us for this special remembrance of the birth of our Savior, Jesus Christ, says Pastor Dennis Whitworth. The Community Bible Church meets at 836 North Second East, Nephi. Services begin at 10 a.m. The Nephi First LDS Ward choir will present a cantata entitled Chimes of the Holy Night, says Gloria Tunbridge, choir . . director. Soloists for the cantata are Delora Nebeker and LaRue Shaw. The choirs accompanist is Tam my Epperson, and Claudia Ostler will be the reader. Some of the numbers to be presented are Christmas Bells are Ringing, How Beautiful In the the Upon Mountains, Let Us Watches of the Night, Go Even Unto Bethlehem, and The Lord is Born Today. The meeting begins at 10:50 a.m. Christmas, a Carol Cantata, will be presented by the Nephi Second LDS Ward, says choir director Bob Tolley. Soloists are Heber Memmott, Diane Brough, Robert Roth, LuAnn Osborne, Laurel Roth, McConkie. A ladies trio, composed of Li3a Brough, and-Julen- e Linda Greenhalgh, and Marla White, will also perform. Readers are Leo Osborne and G. Thornton Skip Hunter. "The choir president is Tom Kendall. Numbers to be performed are Oh Little Town of Bethlehem, Oh Holy What Child is This, Night, Hark the Herald Angels Silent Night, and I Sing, Heard the Bells on Christmas Day. The Levan LDS Ward will have their sacrament meeting at 5 p.m. this Sunday, and a program entitled A Christmas Meditation will be presented, says Lalah Matheson, choir director. There will be choral music, in- strumental music, and a special slide presentation. Colleen Matheson and Mary Bankhead will play The Holy Children, beware of strangers, Sheriff asks Juab County Sheriff David Carter is asking the areas parents to talk to their children about being careful with strangers. The warning comes as a result of a. recent report front Mona, when a suspicious person is said to have been watching children get on and off the school bus. Sheriff Carter says parents should tell their children to be extremely cautious about strangers, to have their children stay away from any strange cars that may -- -- be occupied, and to get license plates of suspicious cars that they may see. We've had no actual attempts to pick up any child, or to force a child into a car, but we have had reports df'someoMsftting in a Car and watching the 'school buses when the kids are getting on and off of the bus. We think its quite essential that children are warned about this problem, talked to about it, and that they are told not tcf be out alone too much at night, Carter said. UEA says some high school classes too big In the Juab School District, 10 of 44 high school classes have more than 30 students, a Utah Education Association has disclosed. survey Some of those classes are too big, said UEA research director Don Ulmer. He acknowledged that some subjects may be more suited to larger class loads, but that some . certainly are not. In the Juab District, the high school class size averages by class are math, 28.6; science, 23.6; social studies, 33; art, 19; business, 8.7; and crafts and vocational, 18.5. No figures were received for English, health, home economics, physical education, or music classes. Juab Middle School class size averages are English, 20.6; math, 19.3; science, 22.6; social studies, 26.9; art, 25; health, 31; physical education, 45; and music, 18. Mona Ward will hold parties Members of the Mona LDS Ward will hold a Christmas parties this Friday and Saturday at the ward church. Adult members of the ward will meet on Friday at 6:30 p.m. for a Christmas dinner and a play. Those attending should bring their own utensils. On Saturday. Primary-ag- e children will meet at 4 p.m. for a movie, treats, and Santa Claus. Lorrie Kelsey will perform with band at Holiday Bowl Lorrie Kelsey of Nephi, will perform with the Brigham Young .y University Cougar Band at the Holiday Bowl in San Diego Friday, Dec. 18. Miss Kelsey, a sophomore in psychology, is a daughter of De and Donna Kelsey of Nephi. She graduated from Juab High School in 1980, where she was active in e Band. In addithe Utah tion to playing trumpet with the Cougar Band, Miss Kelsey is active in Phi Eta Sigma Honor Society at BYU. This is her second year to play with the Cougar Band. band will lead The a parade down colorful Mainstreet USA in Disneyland d and present a concert in the afternoon before the All-Stat- bowl game. Night with Lorrie Kelsey 11 ioT THLIi) CITY, LAKE v 1 1 ON SOUTH I'T soloist Dan Paystrup, a special arrangement Tell of Away in the Manger, a carol Us Shepherd Maids, Beautiful Savior, medley, Hosannah to the Son of David,4! 5 and Holy, Holy, Holy. Fern Wankier and Ann Stowed are the choirs accompanists, and Karen Kenison, Julie Smale, Ruth Tanner, and Judy Hall are the narrators. In the Third LDS War, Christmas choir numbers will be combined with regular sacrament meeting speeches. The choir will sing Abiding in the Field and Oh, Holy Night. The women of the choir will sing Starbright; Soloists will be Vernice Winn and Don Royce. Ron Gowers will sing Serving East Juab County County may receive IPP 'impact' funds Ambulance 623-134- 4 The dispatch number for the East Juab County Ambulance is and while the 623-134- am- bulance usually provides wonderful service to the residents of the area, it cant respond quickly if people dont call the right dispatch number. Ambulance Association officials say in recent days, the ambulance has been delayed three times because people have not had the correct dispatch number, but instead called a number provided by the telephone companys information service. That number rings a phone at the ambulances storage facility. While the phone company has now been given the correct dispatch number, ambulance association officials urge the public to put the correct telephone number near their telephone for quick reference. The ambulance is dispatched by the Juab County Sheriffs Department. Stickers listing the ambulance dispatch number, the fire department dispatch number, and the : , Nephi Police Departments number, are available from the . Nephi Police Department. . . IIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllNIIIIIIIIII Highway Patrol picks up two stolen vehicles The area's Highway Patrol Troopers have been busy again this week picking up stolen cars. On Dec. 13, Trooper Paul Mangelson stopped a truck on a traffic violation. When the driver could produce no drivers license or registration, Mangelson had the vehicle checked on the National Crime Information Center computer. The truck, a 1980 Toyota pickup, had been stolen from a San Diego, Calif, man Nov. 30. The report also said that the driver of the truck, Howard D. Williams, was wanted in Nevada for armed robbery. Williams is presently in the Juab County Jail awaiting extradition. Trooper Scott Duncan picked up another stolen car Tuesday, Dec. 15 in Nephi. When one of the occupants of the car tried to pass a suspicious check at Norms Cafe, and Highway Patrol Sgt. Sterling Christiansen ran a computer check on the vehicle. The check revealed that the car had been stolen at knife point from Denver, Colo., and that the thieves had also taken money from the cars owner. The car, a 1980 Volkswagen Rabbit, had already left the cafe, but Trooper Duncan, Sgt. Christiansen, and Bill Tompkins of the Juab County Sheriffs office stopped it in front of TJs Drive Inn. Three persons were taken into custody: the driver, Michael Horyza, 21, of Denver; and two passengers, Michael R. Jackson, 33, of Carlyle, 111., and a male juvenile. The checks passed by the men were also being investigated, and Duncan is in the process of getting a search warrant through the Juab County Sheriffs office to check the contents of the vehicle for certain items which were involved in the theft. The men are being held at the ld Juab County Jail. Syracuse man rested on gun charges ar- A Syracuse, Utah man allegedly pulled a gun on two Nephi men, Bevan Lofgran and Kevin Garrett, last Friday in Nephi. The Nephi Police Department reports that Steven T. Anderson, 28, was arrested and charged with threatening the use of a weapon. The incident occured at about 8 a.m. on Friday, Dec. 11 at Tillys Drive Inn, and Officer Mike Morgan of the Nephi Police responded to the miles south of Lynndyl by the Utah Highway Patrol. Anderson Nice Place to Live ! iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii Directing the choir at the 2:50 p.m. meeting will be Fern Garrett. The choir will be accompanied by Rheta Sperry. In the Nephi Fourth LD Ward, the choir will present f Cantique de Noel Lin Jarrett; God So Loved the' soloist, World, and Silent Night. Cary Peterson is the choir director. The choir is accompanied by Eileen Tolboe. A cantata entitled The Star of Bethlehem will be presented at, the Nephi Fifth LDS Ward. f Choir director Viola W. Ockey says the choir will sing The Good Quest of the Maggi, solo a with by Phil Tidings in a Manger, and Sperry, Away Far, Far Away on Judeas Plains. A trio, Arlene Jones, Beth Hanson, and LaRae, Kendall, will sing Star of the East. The choirs accompanist is Lin-- , da Whittington. The text of the, narration was taken from a Christmas sermon by Elder Ster- lingW. Sill. The.Nephi y Sixth LDS , Ward wjfj have a program presented by ? the Sunday School and Primary. A Dec. 17, 1981 The Holy City. scene. By the time Morgan arrived, Anderson had left, and a description of the man and his vehicle were given by radio to the areas various police agencies. The vehicle was located two Tomor-rowlan- i KtJi- City on violins, and a quartet composed of Kelly Paystrup, Sheree Kenison, Alan Paystrup, and Gaylord Swim will sing The Birthday of a King. The choir will present Oh Holy Department 225-memb- er iru 467 was subsequently taken to the Delta jail, and was brought to Nephi by the Nephi Police Department. Anderson has since been released on bail. A trial on the misdemeanor charge is pending. TN has Satur- day deadline Because of Christmas, The will be published on Tuesday of next week. Deadlines for news and advertising have been advanced to Saturday, Dec. 19, at noon. Ads and articles brought to the office after that date will be published in the following weeks edition, the publishers say. Times-New- s Juab County may yet get some impact money from the Intermountain Power Project, reports the Juab County Sheriffs Department. If the Sheriff can prove increased arrest reports, increased prisoner population, and a general overall crime increase in the counrelated to the influx of ty workers for IPP, money will be coming from the project to help alleviate the problems, a Sheriffs department spokesman said. In a meeting with an IPP representative Wednesday, it was pointed out that about 12 percent of the projects 360 workers now live in Juab County. The IPP man was told by At its peak, the power project is Sheriff carter that as far as jail expected to bring in about 3,000 capacity and law enforcement workers, and if the 12 percent goes, the county is now almost at figure holds, about 360 workers capacity. With things the way can be expected to live in the area. they currently stand, theres not If each worker brings another two much more impact than we can family members with him, an ina Sheriffs spokesman absorb, flux of about 1,000 people can be said. expected in the area, the Sheriffs office estimates. The Sheriff also told the IPP The IPP representative wants representative that when the Carter to supply some statistical 3,000 workers get here, many evidence of impact to Juab Counmore than 1 2 percent may live in ty from the workers, and the Juab County, because of its closer Sheriff has plans to supply proximity to areas of larger monthly figures to the IPP office. population. Police ask for citizen cooperation 'Flasher' strikes at Nephi Elementary School Tuesday A Flasher has come toNephi. The Nephi Police Department says that Tuesday, Dec. 15, at about 8:30 a.m. in the area of Fourth East and First North, a man exposed himself to an 11 year-old girl who was on her way to school. -- Nephi Chief of Police William O. Young says the girl was called to a car by a lone male occupant who wanted directions to the high school. As she went over to give the man directions, he exposed himself. Young said the car was gold colored, had imitation wood panelining, and had a r terior. It could have been a station wagon, but the girl was not sure. The car had no license plates. The flasher was described as light-brow- n four-doo- having average height and brown weight, medium-lengthair, and a mustache. He was white shirt wearing a and a brown vest. Most of these types of incidents go unreported. I would ask anyone having any information about this type of incident to report it to the police department, said Young. The Police Chief said the incident was the first of its type to in Nephi, but his knowledge with different types of people we have coming in, these types of things will probably increase. Again, I request that if people see any suspicious vehicles or persons in their neighborhoods, particularly around the schools, that they report them to the police department, Young said. h long-sleeve- d Burglars are busy in Levan, Sheriff says A $200 car stereo and two speakers were stolen from a vehicle owned by a Levan man Sun- day. The Juab County Sheriffs office says the Pioneer car stereo and Pioneer speakers were stolen from a van parked in front of the Jim Engh residence in Levan. Engh lives at Third North and Mian in Levan. Sheriff Dave Carter says his office has a suspect in the theft, and the investigation is continuing. At about 3 a.m. the following day, a burglar tried to enter the Engh house. He probably thought the place was empty, said Sheriff Carter, as Enghs van was gone and he was to work. There was a woman in the house, however, and as she heard the back window open, she fled the house and called the Sheriffs office. When Sheriff Carter arrived, would-bburglar had fled. He had apparently heard the woman open the door and left, Carter said. The sheriff thinks the e that the burglar was the same person who stole the car stereo earlier that day. Mona to have fulltime city manager Mona Town will soon have a manager, the Town Board decided at its recent meeting. Mayor-elec- t Bryce Lynn told the board that in his opinion, the workload has increased beyond servee of the board, the part-timand it would be to the advantage of the town to create such a position. The board approved the suggestion, and also gave Lynn permis full-tim- e e sion to fill other positions that will be needed. These include a clerk, a treasurer, a town marshall, and a justice of the peace. The board also approved a building permit for a house to be constructed by Lee Howarth in the Mona Nightingale Estates, and changed its meeting day from the second Thursday of each month to the second Tuesday of each month, beginning January. in i ia-- A |