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Praise came in the council's weekly study session before city leaders debated whether or not to license cats and outlaw cars from being parked on a owned strip of property between sidewalks and street curbs. arrest Lehi Police Juab officials Council praises mayor, staff decide to give two juveniles for for road bond campaign work fiaga rest By PATRICK CHRISTIAN Herald Staff Writer The Provo City Council Wednesday praised mayoral assistant Ray-len- e Ireland and mayor Joseph Jenkjins for organizing the campaign for the road improvement bond referendum that sailed to victory Tuesday. vk- 55 Vim "i V Russel Daly Photo A Lehi police officer looks over recovered property that was stolen last monh. But then, they always knew he was someone special. Ray and Shirley Greenwood, and other relatives in American Fork are also proud of him. The mayor and city council of Mountain View passed a resolution commending Greenwood for his courageous act and said the community should be proud of the type of responsible, caring citizen he is. She didn't say anything: just nodded her head and walked on." Ppr.nlp at the station patted Cal-trai- V n t V pass to him for the entire month of November. She had sort of a startled look on her face. commuter train at the Harvard Park Sta i He has no idea who the woman was. Richard Greenwood is an enviornmental engineer with Canonie Environmental Services in San Mateo, was waiting for the 5:18 p.m. As "a small token" of their ap- Greenwood said he could see the woman wasn't going to get out of the way in time, so he jumped onto the tracks, grabbed her and yanked her off about half a second before the train went preciation company officials presented an unrestricted by.

The California Department of Transportation, which operates the CalTrain service, didn't forget Greenwood's unselfish act. One of the engineers sent a cash reward to Greenwood because he was so relieved at not being involved in a tragedv. The train engineers praised him for saving the woman's life. He then boarded the train for home where his wife and three children were waiting for him. People were yelling at her and the train engineer was trying to stop." Apparently the woman was deaf and couldn't hear the train whistle and the shouts from the people on the platform. "By the time the train came around the corner she was onlv about half way in the middle of the track. It began when Greenwood, who how-muc- & 1 tion. He didn't realize danger he was in until the train went by. He said when he saw the woman was in danger he was frightened for her and acted on impulse. the Mountain View, Calif, city council and CalTrain officials honored Greenwood recently. It would have been absolutely impossible for them to stop the train. The train engineers said if Greenwood hadn't acted so quickly the woman would have been killed. But one day last March he jumped in front of a train to save the life of an elderly woman. Fork resident lauded for saving elderly woman's life By VERLAINE ALLEN American Fork Correspondent - AMERICAN FORK Richard Greenwood, a former American Fork resident, doesn't think of himself as the "hero" typo.
