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Show Wednesday, April 7, 1976 Page 2 ii:"i'.'"'Xi Letters to the Editor Festival Planning? Editor and Park City Residents Re: Park City Art Festival I read, with some dismay, an article in the March 17 edition of Hie Newspaperin-ferring Newspaperin-ferring "Ivers observed that "not much planning" went into the earlier efforts". - While at times I tend to be lazy, I feel that my fellow workers at the time, people like Mike Donje, Jim Patterson, Pat-terson, Dave Chaplin, John Sharp, Helen Norton, Jennifer Jen-nifer Giddings, John Stagg, Mary Ann Cone, Jan McCone etc. certainly worked very hard, for 12 months each year - to organize and plan a successful suc-cessful festival, and at no cost to viewers, with free parking (thanks to resort officials) free bus service and with our members also doing garbage pickups during the days of the festival. . . I only hope that the thought of "not much planning" is only in the minds of a few people, and I believe that we had been able to do it to Park City's benefit, while we were running the festival, with none of us getting any financial finan-cial remuneration. , Sincerly, Victor Buck, member Park City Art Foundation WW" Jill Patty Dtwrlll JtnninWaH Snowmobile Trap Dear Editor and Crosscountry Cross-country writer, I agree 100 percent with the guy That wrote in about that cross-country , ski guy. All those Sierra; Clubers are alike, . always against progress, and many of them are just down-right mean. Let me tell you what happened to a friend up in Logan. He was snowmobiling up in Logan Canyon somewhere when just plum in the middle of the road wan an unopened can of 40 weight oil. : Seeing how there was nobody around to claim it, he just stopped and got off his machine and walked over to pick it up. Just as his hand reached the can, why a rope came out from underneath the ,snow and yanked him clear upside jJpwn - dangling from . .a ;,' young free.. Then wither terrible scream, like an injun on the warpath, this beardedtfreak , in those funny short pants and cross-country skis, comes out of the woods. Not bothering to help my friend, he goes, right up to his machine and pours that sticky goop that they put on their skis - right into his new Artie Cat carberator! ! By the time my friend got himself down, his snow machine was covered with ' goop and he couldn't get it started, so he had to walk out. We've gone up and down that canyon looking fbr the guy who did this, but its hard to tell, because all those skiers look alike, even the girls! I hope you'll stop printing all those articles about crosscountry cross-country skiing and anti-progress anti-progress stuff - and give some space to hard workings honest folks. Sincerely, Elmer Judd Salt Lake City. Don Thomases How About It ? What Is your opinion on the proposed Kimball Fine Arts Center? Patty Deverill - 'Tm just going to love it. It will be the best thing that's happened to Park City. More than anything I feel it is going to provide the town with a greater variety of interest. in-terest. ',-. Thorn ate Nye r I am completely in favor of any steps Park City takes to nourish the already existing pro-art atmosphere. It sounds like the type of art organization that will work. Jennine Wait - It would be nice if we could get a summer cultural environment in town. I would definitely be interested in using the facilities they are planning to provide. Joan Pillinger - The idea of an art center in Park City is super and will probably be a great success. The only problem is location due to the lack of parking on a bad corner. Hopefully, the developers will solve it and the art center will be a reality. Don Thomases - An Art Center is just what Park City needs - . next to a professional basketball team. If it can be kept from going commercial it will be great. Although, when they start making plastic replicas of the Coalition building, it'll be time topack it in. Phil Aurit - It should be a very positive attraction at-traction for the city, particularly in the summer which is what the town needs most. m 1 to 4 h- . ...... , ..... ,wJ,.,, Thomas Nyt Joan Pilllngtr If PhllAurtt PROCLAMATION OPEN DOOR POLICY Beginning April 6, Police Chief Lund will institute in-stitute an '.'Open Door" policy. He will be in his office from (J p.m. until 9 p.m. every Tuesday to listen to complaints, suggestions or anything the public wishes to discuss. LEASH LAW Starting April 5, Park City's dog leash law will be strictly enforced. The police department has received reports of several dog bites in addition to numerous complaints. Any person owning a dog which is not confined or on a leash will be subject to the issuance of a citation and possible fine. Food and Beverage Meeting The Art Festival Food and Beverage Com-mittee Com-mittee will meet at 2 p.m. on April 14 in the TMI. All interested non-profit organizations and all licensed Park City restaurant and bar people are encouraged to attend. LOGO BIDS Chamber of Commerce is accepting bids for its new logo. Interested persons should call or come by the Chamber office located in Silver King Bank lobby, 649-8899. Time limit, 14 days, due April 22, 1976. Time for Softball Commissioner Bowie Hazelrig has announced that Park City's slow pitch Softball league will start league play in June. Interested persons should begin forming teams and maybe even practice prior to the season opener. It is anticipated that expansion clubs will be added to the circuit this summer. Other nouncements will be forthcoming. an- Master Plan Pick It Up Day ... Iniunction 8ti irfj iteaivionaay Transportation Funding Given Approval at State Level Park City's application for federal funding of its no-fare transportation system received the green light from state officials last week. City Planner Van Martin reported that the city's proposal was one of three to be passed on to regional authorities in Denver, Colo. The chances of regional approval, which would send the application to the federal level, appear favorable, Martin said. He noted that Lowell Elmer of the State Highways and Transportation Tran-sportation Office called Park City's proposal "far superior" to the two other Utah applications, both of which gained regional ap proval last year "but which were rejected by feden; agencies. Elmer said Park City has shown a "more critical need' than either Cache Valley or a Navajo Indian tribe. The city is requesting $337,700 in federal funds to purchase four 28-passenger busses, a van for the elderly and handicapped and 12 acres of land for intercept parking. The money which would be granted under the Rural Highway Demonstration Program, would also be used to finance one third of next year's operating and maintenance costs. u jit Mayor Uriarto Signs A court injunction which had halted progress on Park City's master plan since early March was lifted Monday. . City Attorney Carl Nemelka reported attorney Robert Sykes representing developer Elwood Nielsen agreed to have the injunction "disposed of" after Judge Stewart Hansen had indicated what action he would take during a hearing scheduled for Monday morning in Coalville. The injunction was signed March 2 by Judge Snow while Nemelka was in the hospital and unable to represent the city. , Nemelka, after researching the situation, had concluded that - "areas in which judgement or discretionary decisions are made bv a citv The Park City Chamber of Commerce will sponsor '.'Pick itup JnPark City" day, Saturday, - 14 at 5 p.m. in the Great Room at the Treasure Mountain Inn for anyone interested in being on the organizational committee. ' council" ;ire not subject to Tentative plans call for the involvement of injunctive relief. Only when an every service organization in the com munity, administrative act is "clearly with cooperation from the city, National Guard, arbitrary" can an injunction iocai vendors, and schools with a full days work, be granted, the city attorney foUowed by free refreshments in the town park Nielsen requested the in- V-of helP.needed! junction and filed suit against Contact Bill Shorter, Chairman of the "Pick it the city contending the "P in Park City" day. 363-6243 or 649-9241. emerging Masters Plan will The dump will be open from the 15th to the 21st deprive him of his right to use and city vehicles will be picking up through the his property. . 21st. Nemelka revealed he will ' ask for a summary judgement to have Nielsen's suit thrown out of court. The attorney maintains the suit is inappropriate inap-propriate since the Master Candidate to Announce On Saturday April lo. 1976: 7n n m Rnh Plan has not yet been ap- Trenanier uni L! JSJ t , .. ... 1 " iwuiivc ma cauuiuacv iui proved. He said the suit has no emms r r basis until the planning Summ" County Commissioner on the American commission at least makes a P?ry T,cket- You are ittV'" to aend. Sand-recommendation Sand-recommendation to the city w,ches a"d refreshments will be served. It will council for adoption. be held at the Memorial Bldg., 301 Main Street, m Park City, Utah. See you there! I I Publisher . ...... J. Howard Stable I Editor. . . . ........ Steve Dering I Business Manager . Bonnie Stable I Reporter, I Photographer . . . . . Greg Schirf Office Manager. . ..... Sandy Ericksor, ; j Published weekly at Park City, Utah. Sub-1 I scripttons $6 per year, $10 out of state. Send or-I or-I ders for subscriptions or change of address to THE NEWSPAPER P.O. Box 738, Park City, Utah 84060. , Pictures, news and advertising may be sub-1 I mitted prior to Wednesday publication at our of-1 fice, 419 Main St., Park City, by mail, P.O. Box j j 738, Park City, or by calling 649-9592 or 359-12612. 359-12612. Publication matter must be received by i Monday afternoon for Wednesday publication. WHEREAS, Cancer is the common foe of all mankind and will strike 675,000 Americans this year, among them 2,100 Utahans, and WHEREAS, many forms of cancer are curable if detected early and treated properly, as evidence by the success of the Virginia Whitney Cancer Detection Clinics which offer free breast examinations and Pap smears to Utah women, as well as free proctoscopic examinations to men and women, and WHEREAS, one of three who now get cancer is being cured but at least half of those who get cancer could and should be saved by early diagnosis and prompt treatment, and WHEREAS, the American Cancer Society alerts the public to cancer's warning signals through some 20,000 Neighbor Savers who will visit Utah homes during the April Crusade and leave a life-sayving pamphlet, and WHEREAS, in addition to support of vital research such as that being carried on in Utah hospitals and universities, univer-sities, the American Cancer Society conducts other programs of public and professional education, and WHEREAS, many cancers can be prevented, such as lung cancer, mainly caused by - cigarette smoking, and most skin cancers, caused by frequent exposure to direct sunlight, and ; WHEREAS, the medical profession is kept informed by the American Cancer Society of the latest advances in the treatment of cancer and nurses are informed how best to care for cancer patients, and WHEREAS, the American " Cancer Society, through its Utah Division, provides useful and compassionate aid to women who have had breast surgery, through its Reach to Recovery Program, offers help through :a Laryngectomy Club and an Ostomy Club, and conducts other rehabilitation programs seeking to improve , the quality of survival, and WHEREAS, April fs Cancer Control Month, by Presidential Proclamation and and Congressional Resolution, , Therefore, BE IT RESOLVED... ?, That all residents of this city be urged to support the educational and fund raising efforts of the American Cancer Society as part of Cancer Control Month in April. k Done under my hand this day of April in the year of our Lord, One Thousand Nine Hundred and Seventy Six, Leon Uriarte, Mayor of the city of Park City, Utah. LADIES LUNCHEON . Make your reservation now for the Twenty-Second Twenty-Second Annual Park City Ladies Luncheon 'to be held at the C'est Bon Hotel, May 1, at 1 p.m. You can reserve a place with one of the following ladies: In Park City - Mrs. Ada Skillicorn, 649-9487; Mrs Berniece Marcellin, 649-9505; 649-9505; Mrs. Carolyn Grose, 649-9764; Mrs. Beverly Pace, 649-9583; Alice O'Neill, 649-9433; Mrs. Myrtle Buck, 649-9534; Mrs. Ethel Pedersen, 649-9705; Mrs. La Von Hewittson, 649-9477; Mrs, LaVern Mathie, 649-9296; Mrs., Nan McPolin, 649-9417. In Salt Lake City you may call: Mrs. Lorene Bircumshaw, 485-3760; Mrs. Clara Reseigh 328-2164; Mrs. Virginia Leahy, 467-5374; Mrs. Ada Haran; 484-2315; Mrs. Elva Thompsen, 355-9389; 355-9389; and Mrs. Berniece Londer, 486-8829. The Heber and Midway Area: Mrs. Phyllis Koholer, 654-0548; Mrs. Patricia Brown, 654-1793; Mrs. Shirley Olpin, 654-1161; , Mrs. Ruth Marohinney, 654-0776; Mrs. Dorthey Van Wagoner, 654-0776; Mrs. Elianor Duke, 654-1636. In Kamas: Mrs. Erma Prescott, 783-4827. Coalville: Mrs. Gwen Larsen, 336-2435. Provo: Mrs. Sybil Booke and Mrs. Rhoda Anderson. - Ogden: Mrs .Sharon Johnson and Mrs Grace W. Smith. Cedar City: Mrs. Donna T. Mitchell. Fourth of July Next meeting to continue plans for the Fourth of July Celebration will be Tuesday evening April 20, 1976, in the Memorial Building. Town Races There will be a town race held at the Park City Resort Tuesday, April 13, at 11:30 a.m. The location will be announced. The event will be an Individual dual elimination. Prizes will be cash for the Pro class and trophies for the A, B, and C Classes. The entry fee will be $5.00 for the Pro Class and three dollars for the A, B, and C Classes. Registration will be at the Information booth at the Resort Center before 12 noon on April 12. BUILDING PERMITS Applications for building permits must allow time for plan review as follows : Single Family Dwellings 1 day Apartments, duplex, triplex. . ..... . . .... 2 days Fourplex 3days 5-8 units;.... ......4days 9 units and more i Week Commercial Units .1-5 days, , dependent on size Remodeling 1.5 days, dependent on size AA Moots ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS MEETS MONDAY MON-DAY EVE. AT 8 P.M. AT THE MEMORIAL BLDG. FOR INFORMATION CALL 649-9848 |